The verb form of improvement is improve.
Other verbs are improves, improving and improved.
Some example sentences are:
"I will improve my score".
"She improves her singing every night".
"We are improving the roads".
"The flavours have been improved".
Noun forms for the verb to improve are improver, improvement, and the gerund, improving.
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There is no verb form of technician
Alloys are useful improvement over pure metals because they tend to be stronger.
Sabotage is also a verb. For example "to sabotage something" is an action and therefore a verb.
Noun forms for the verb 'improve' are improvablity and improvement.
The verb is "to improve". That's called the "full infinitive" of the verb. It can take other forms, but that's the basic one.
The word 'improve' is not an adjective. The word 'improve' is a verb, meaning to make better or to increase in value; a word for an action.The abstract noun forms of the verb to improve are improvement and the gerund, improving.
Yes, the noun improvement is an abstract noun, a word a change for the better; progress in development; a word for a concept.
The noun forms for the verb to improve are improver, improvement, and the gerund, improving.
Noun forms for the verb to improve are improver, improvement, and the gerund, improving.
The suffix -ment is added to a verb to create a noun that denotes the action or result of that verb. For example, "improve" becomes "improvement," indicating the act or process of improving something.
Yes, "progressed" is an adjective. It can also be used as a verb.
Progressive is an adjective, based on the verb progress (to move forward). Progressive means forward-moving, gradual, or aimed at improvement.
You can use "were" in a sentence as the past tense of the verb "to be." For example, "They were happy to see each other."
The abstract noun of "improve" is "improvement." It's pretty straightforward - just add "-ment" to the end of the verb and boom, you've got yourself an abstract noun. So go ahead, make that improvement and show off your fancy grammar skills.
No. The form "begun" of the verb to begin is a participle, and cannot be used without an auxiliary verb - normally was, had, or have, and conditionals such as could or should. The proper form here is the past tense,"began."