The verb 'vet' means to examine closely.
At a Baseball stadium, for example, the security guards must vet the fans, who are coming inside, for weapons and other illegal paraphernalia. They will search people who are entering the stadium and remove the ones that seem threatening.
Dont you mean irregular verb no such word as 'eregular'?
No. A verb is an action. I mean run is a verb because it's an action word.
Hadn't is a contraction of the verb 'had' and the adverb 'not'; the contraction acts as a verb.
A verb is a doing word. Example: TomJUMPED over the wall in that sentence the word jumped was the verb
Do you mean lives as in "The cat has nine lives", or do you mean it as in "He lives"? It is a noun in the first sentence, it is the direct object, receiving the action of the verb "has". In the second sentence, it is a verb. It is the action of the subject, "He".
The verb 'vet' means to subject something to a careful and thorough examination.Example sentence: We will vet all bids before selecting the best one.The noun 'vet' is an informal word for a veterinarian.Example sentence: We took our puppy to the vet for her shots.The noun 'vet' is an informal word for a veteran of military service.Example sentence: My father is a vet who served in Korea.
maximum vet fees the most you would have to pay
Yes, the word 'vet' is a noun, a singular, common noun; a short form for the noun veterinarian, a word for a doctor who treats animals; an informal term for a military veteran; a word for a person.The word 'vet' is also a verb, meaning to subject someone or something to thorough examination or evaluation to determine suitability, authenticity, or if it's allowable.
The animal doctor is a veterinarian.Someone who served in the armed forces is a veteran.The verb vet means to examine or scrutinize.
The verb savvy is to understand, to comprehend.
It can be used as a verb to mean that you are outlining something.
Maybe you mean REALIZE? Yes it is a verb.
Call the vet.
Take it to the vet.
what do you mean
as a verb
to have to