No, "You hate waiting in line" is a complete sentence. The verb is "hate".
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∙ 10y agoNo, it is not an adverb. Waiting is a verb form and gerund (noun), and can be an adjunct or adjective (waiting patients, waiting room). The seldom used adverb form is waitingly.
a que
No, I didn't.If this is some kind of joke, I'm waiting for the punch line.
False. The correct answer is "If two independent clauses are connected by a semicolon, the dotted line goes straight from one verb to the other." (A+)
Yes, the word finish is a noun (finish, finishes) and a verb (finish, finishes, finished, finishing). The word finish is also used as an adjective.Examples:Noun: At the finish, the hero gets the girl.Noun: Your new counter top has a nice finish.Verb: Please finish the dishes before you go out.Adjective: I'll be waiting for you at the finish line.
Queue can be either a noun or a verb. As a noun it can mean a waiting line, a type of hair braid, or a sequence in a computer program. As a noun, it means to form a waiting line.
waiting isn't a helping verb! I came on this site to find what helping verb could replace waiting!
Yes,waiting is a action verb
yes he hates waiting
The verb forms of hatred are hate, hates and hated.Some example sentences are:"I hate spiders"."She hates spinach"."She hated the colour of the bathroom".
A noun, verb, or adjective:Hate is a dangerous vice. (noun, subject of the sentence)I hate him. (verb)He was arrested for his hate speech. (adjective, describes the noun 'speech')
"Some examples of verb phrases are: 'is playing', 'will eat', 'has been running'. These phrases consist of a main verb along with auxiliary verbs or helping verbs."
No and adverb. Adverbs add information about the verb. I hate eating vegetables. I truly hate eating vegetables. (truly has given us more information about the verb hate)
No, "waiting" is not a preposition. "Waiting" is a verb that describes the action of staying in one place for a period of time until something happens.
I hate = Yo odio From the verb Odiar ( to hate )
"Q" is the first letter for "queueing", which means waiting in line or the study of waiting in line.
The phrase "had been waiting" is the past perfect continuous tense of the verb "to wait." It functions as a verb phrase in the sentence.