(transitive) Make poor. (transitive) Weaken in quality; deprive of some strength or richness. (intransitive) Become poor.
Q. What is the verb forms of do?
It has five different forms: do, does, doing, did, done. The base form of the verb is do. The past simple form, did, is the same throughout. The present participle is doing.
Table of Contents
- Q. What is the verb forms of do?
- Q. What is the verb form of advice?
- Q. What is the verb form of cheap?
- Q. What is the verb form of class?
- Q. What is the verb form of sufficient?
- Q. What is the verb form of rich?
- Q. What is a rich word?
- Q. What is the verb of glad?
- Q. What type of word is sure?
- Q. What can I say instead of sure?
- Q. How do you say I’m not sure in polite way?
Q. What is the verb form of advice?
Advice: a noun meaning “opinion given or offered as to action.” Advise: a verb meaning “to counsel, caution, or warn.” The past tense form of the verb advise is advised.
Q. What is the verb form of cheap?
Cheap verb forms
Infinitive | Present Participle | Past Tense |
---|---|---|
cheap | cheaping | cheaped |
Q. What is the verb form of class?
class. verb. classed; classing; classes. Definition of class (Entry 2 of 2) transitive verb.
Q. What is the verb form of sufficient?
suffice. (intransitive) To be enough or sufficient; to meet the need (of anything); to be equal to the end proposed; to be adequate; to be good enough. (transitive) To satisfy; to content; to be equal to the wants or demands of.
Q. What is the verb form of rich?
Rich verb forms
Infinitive | Present Participle | Past Tense |
---|---|---|
rich | riching | riched |
Q. What is a rich word?
Some common synonyms of rich are affluent, opulent, and wealthy. While all these words mean “having goods, property, and money in abundance,” rich implies having more than enough to gratify normal needs or desires.
Q. What is the verb of glad?
gladden. (transitive) To cause (something) to become more glad. (intransitive, archaic) To become more glad in one’s disposition.
Q. What type of word is sure?
adjective, sur·er, sur·est. free from doubt as to the reliability, character, action, etc., of something: to be sure of one’s data. confident, as of something expected: sure of success. convinced, fully persuaded, or positive: to be sure of a person’s guilt. assured or certain beyond question: a sure victory.
Q. What can I say instead of sure?
- Synonyms for sure. all right, alright, assuredly, certainly, clearly, definitely, doubtless, easily, forsooth, hands down, inarguably,
- Words Related to sure. conceivably, likely, perhaps, possibly, probably. obviously, unmistakably.
- Phrases Synonymous with sure. by all means, by all odds, damn well, for certain, for sure.
Q. How do you say I’m not sure in polite way?
Ways of saying you are not sure – thesaurus
- perhaps. adverb. used for saying that you are not certain about something, or that something may or may not be true.
- maybe. adverb.
- presumably. adverb.
- reportedly. adverb.
- rumour/word/legend has it that. phrase.
- it/that depends. phrase.
- not that I’m aware of. phrase.
- I dare say. phrase.