Yes, the word 'skate' is a noun, one of a pair of skates (ice or roller). A skate is also a type of ray, a Saltwater Fish.
The word skate is also a verb (skate, skates, skating, skated).
Roller-skate, as a verb, should be hyphenated. Roller skate, as a noun, is not.
skateboard noun (skate-bored)
Roller-skate, as a verb, should be hyphenated. Roller skate, as a noun, is not.
The compound noun roller-skate is a common noun, a word for any roller-skate of any kind, anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing; for example:Harborena Roller Skating Rink Inc., Hoquiam, WashingtonLenexa Supreme Roller SkatesNational Museum of Roller Skating, Lincoln, Nebraska
The word 'skated' is not a noun; skated is the past participle, past tense of the verb to skate.The noun form is skate (plural skates), a word for footwear worn to skate. Examples:Verb: We roller skated in the park today.Noun: The lace on my left skate is broken. This pair of skates is brand new.
No. The noun and intransitive verb are both "skateboard."
The word "Skating" is a verb because it is an action (something you do)the basics:Noun: Person, Place or thingexample: Rihanna, School, burgerverb: an actionexample: running, jumping, walkadjectve: a word used to describeexample: pretty, fluffy, gross
The plural form of the noun skater is skaters.The plural possessive form is skaters'.Example: The skaters' performances at the ice show were phenomenal.
The word that usually goes with the verb to 'cheep' is the noun 'cheep'; that is cheep-cheep, a compound noun for the sound made by a bird.The homophone, the adjective 'cheap', is often paired with the noun 'skate' to form the compound noun cheapskate.
No, it is not an adverb. The word skated is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to skate."
You skate.
Not skate