The verb of brightness is brighten.
As in "to brighten something".
Margarita Bechtelar
The verb form of "bright" is "brighten." This means to make something brighter or to become brighter.
Brightened.
couldn't care less lol :)
The word "face" is not an adverb. It can be used as a noun and a verb. Noun: She shielded her face from the bright light. Verb: The man hesitantly faced the judge.
A verb is an action. How is not a verb, if that was what you were asking
The verb forms are access, accesses, accessing, accessed. The verb access is an action verb (a verb for an act).
Brightened.
Brighten is the verb form meaning to make bright.
The verb for brightness is brighten. As in "to brighten something or somewhere".
couldn't care less lol :)
lights is the subject of the verb were
No, it is an adjective. It can mean clear, distinct, or bright.
The verb in the sentence is "makes." It is the action that the subject (the lamp) is performing on the object (the room).
The problem is with subject-verb agreement. "He" should be changed to "He wants" to match the plural verb "want." The correct sentence is: "He wants to give me a bright red car."
The word cheering is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb to cheer.
There is only one verb in that sentence: the word 'shines'.
i do not now that ha ha ha you suck
The word "face" is not an adverb. It can be used as a noun and a verb. Noun: She shielded her face from the bright light. Verb: The man hesitantly faced the judge.