No, not a noun, not a verb. The word 'efficient' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.The noun form for the adjective efficient is efficiency.
No, the word "leaked" is not an adverb.The word "leaked" is a verb.
No, the word 'tighten' is not a noun. The word 'tighten' is a verb, a word for an action.The noun forms of the verb to tighten are tightener (a concrete noun as a word for a physical device) and the gerund, tightening (a concrete noun as a word for a physical act).
The word 'construct' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'construct' is a word a word for an object built from various parts; an idea or theory made up of various conceptual elements; a word for a thing.Construct as a verb is pronounced kuhn-struhkt.Construct as a noun is pronounced kon-struhkt.The noun forms for the verb to construct are constructor, construction, and the gerund, constructing.
Invent is one verb of the word invention.Invents, inventing and invented are other verbs, depending on the tense.
Yes, the noun 'crew' is a concrete noun, a word for a group of workers; a word for a physical group.The word 'crew' is also a verb: crew, crews, crewing, crewed.
Singular - CREWS = plural. The problem is that it can take a singular or plural verb form. When the word is viewed as a collective noun and its members act as a collectivity, the verb should be plural. ex: The crew ARE tired. When the verb is seen as a unit, as a whole, it takes a singular form: ex. The crew IS made up of 20 people.
The word 'crew' is a noun (crew, crews) and a verb(crew, crews, crewing, crewed).The noun 'crew' is a word for the group of people who operate a ship, airplane, or train; a group of people who work together at a specified job; a word for a thing.The verb 'crew' is to work as a member of a group who operate a ship, airplane, or train, or as a member of a group who work together at a specified job.
The noun 'crew' is a singular, common, concrete, collective noun; a word for a group of people or workers.The word 'crew' is also a verb: crew, crews, crewing, crewed.
The collective noun 'crew' is singular, one crew. The correct verb is 'The crew prepares...'.
"How are things with our complement working crew?" Either you mistyped something, or your employer's a moron. Complement is a verb; complimentary is an adverb. Which still doesn't make any sense...
Example sentence for the noun crew: The company jet has a permanent crew of three. Example sentence for the verb crew: The company is now interviewing people to crew our yacht.
A noun (or a collective noun) functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:A crew of laborers cleared the debris that blocked the road. (the noun 'crew' is the subject of the sentence)The coffee that the crew of pilots ordered was served following takeoff. (the noun 'crew' is the subject of the relative clause)The captain inspected a crew of sailors standing at attention. (the noun 'crew' is the direct object of the verb 'inspected')I'm trying out for a position on the crew of rowers. (the noun 'crew' is the object of the preposition 'on')
Many of the crew did not like the way the captain was running things and decided to mutiny. (verb)After the mutiny, Henry Hudson, his son, and some of his crew were set adrift in a small boat, and were never seen again. (noun)
The word 'rolling' is the present participle, present tense of the verb 'to roll'. The present participle is also a gerund, a verb form that functions as a noun, and an adjective. Examples:Verb: A crew was rolling the paving to a smooth surface.Noun: When the rolling was completed, the next crew painted the lines.Adjective: As Jim watched the men work he said he wanted to run a big rolling machine when he grew up.
the word were is a LINKING VERB.
The word 'be' is indeed a verb.