Electrify, electrifies, electrifying and electrified are verbs.
So are electrocute, electrocutes, electrocuting and electrocuted.
Depending on the tense.
For example:
"I need to electrify the circuit".
"We will electrocute the alien".
"She electrifies the circuit".
"The marine electrocutes the aliens"
"We are electrifying them".
"We are electrocuting them".
"They were electrified".
"The murderer was electrocuted".
The verb of electricity is electrify.Other verbs are electrifies, electrifying and electrified."I will electrify you"."He electrifies his audience with the act"."The generators were electrified".
Power is a verb. Power/powers is the present tense, powered is the past tense and past participle, and powering is the present participle. Example: Electricity powers homes.
The noun 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. The verb 'is' functions as an auxiliary verb and a linking verb.
It is a Linking Verb. The word are is a conjugation of the verb "to be."
It is an action verb.
he was overwhelmed by the amount of power he had
The word "electricity" is the direct object in the sentence "Who discovered electricity?" The direct object receives the action of the verb, which in this case entails what was being discovered.
The verb of electricity is electrify.Other verbs are electrifies, electrifying and electrified."I will electrify you"."He electrifies his audience with the act"."The generators were electrified".
Power is a verb. Power/powers is the present tense, powered is the past tense and past participle, and powering is the present participle. Example: Electricity powers homes.
Power is a verb. Power/powers is the present tense, powered is the past tense and past participle, and powering is the present participle. Example: Electricity powers homes.
As a noun: I made a contract for an apartment lease As a verb: I contracted for electricity supply to my house.
You don't. It's an adjective, or colloquially sometimes a noun meaning "electricity", especially in the sense of "electric service": "We don't have the electric here."
Yes, the word 'shock' is both a noun and a verb.The verb 'shock' is to cause surprise, upset, or horror; to apply a jolt of electricity; a word for an action.Examples:The EMT used a defibrillator to shock the patient's heart. (verb)Velda likes to shock her classmates with her wild antics. (verb)The shock of her death left the family in dismay. (noun)
No, the word 'charged' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to charge. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective (a charged battery, charged purchases).The noun forms of the verb to charge are charge, charger, and the gerund, charging.
Benjamin Franklin did not discover electricity. He performed many experiments with electricity, but saying that he "discovered" it is like saying that Charles Lindbergh discovered the airplane. Bad analogy. An airplane is man-made. Electricity is a natural phenomenon which, like the magnetic field or atomic structure, can be discovered. For a man-made object on the other hand, the proper verb would be "invent" - Lindberg of course did not invent the airplane but someone did. No one "invented" electricity, but the phenomenon was unrecognized until someone, or a series of persons, discovered its existence.
The noun 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be'. The verb 'is' functions as an auxiliary verb and a linking verb.
It is a Linking Verb. The word are is a conjugation of the verb "to be."