The verb form of "learn" is "to study" or "to acquire knowledge."
The future tense form of the verb "learn" in the sentence "I am ready to learn about verbs" is "will learn."
"Learn" is a verb. It is an action word that describes the process of gaining knowledge or skills.
"Learn" is a verb. It is an action word that describes the process of acquiring knowledge or skills.
learn doesn't actually have a pluralised form as it is a verb, not a noun. But the conjugation of the verb to learn is as follows: I learn You learn He/She/It learns We learn They learn
The verb form of "learn" is "to study" or "to acquire knowledge."
The future tense form of the verb "learn" in the sentence "I am ready to learn about verbs" is "will learn."
The verb in French for "to learn" is "Apprendre"
The verb to learn is a regular verb.
The main verb is learn. Can is a modal auxiliary verb.
"Learn" is a verb. It is an action word that describes the process of gaining knowledge or skills.
"Learn" is a verb. It is an action word that describes the process of acquiring knowledge or skills.
No. The word 'learn' is a verb.
learn doesn't actually have a pluralised form as it is a verb, not a noun. But the conjugation of the verb to learn is as follows: I learn You learn He/She/It learns We learn They learn
Learned is a verb. Remember, a noun is a thing, place, person.ANS2:No, it can be the past tense of the verb 'to learn' or it could be used as an adjective such as "a learned lesson" or "a learned (LEARN-ed) man"
The verb in the sentence is "need." It is the action word that expresses the subject's requirement or necessity to learn.
The intransitive verb would be learn, because in this sentence learn has no direct object.