1. deed
good deed
Which is why he must not until the deed is done.
Such a deed is an offense against the law.
I admire your brave deed.
Shocked by the events of September 11th, politicians all over the world condemned the terrorists for their reprehensible deed.
We ought to put all our efforts into supporting this in word and deed, including in this House.
You will burn in Hell for all your evil deeds!
You shouldn't judge people by what they say. Rather, you should look at their deeds
Henry forgot that being drunk did not release him from the consequences of his deeds
deed of company, formation, of ownership
It seems to me that a lot of evil deeds are done in the name of religion.
a brave/charitable/evil/good deed
Without the memory of his deed, he cannot possibly feel guilty.
Some kinds of agreement need to be by deed in order to be binding.
it was one of the bravest deeds by a soldier that I ever saw
2. verb
Can you conjugate this verb?
If there was a verb called "to nache", "Nache!" would be the imperative form.
The trouble with "trouble" is that it's sometimes a verb, sometimes a noun, sometimes countable, sometimes not. Oh, well. Trouble troubles me little, and little troubles trouble me not at all.
Whenever the literary German dives into a sentence, that is the last you are going to see of him till he emerges on the other side of his Atlantic with his verb in his mouth.
The verb 'help' takes to-infinitives and bare infinitives but bare infinitives are said to be the most common in casual text; as also used in this example sentence.
This verb is somewhat similar to "to drink".
'Verb' refers to the predicate verb. Predicate verbs change their form depending on the subject and the time expressed.
Accordingly, besides noun declension patterns, there also existed a greater variety of verb conjugation patterns than in Modern English.
A word or phrase that describes an action (such as eat), an event (such as happen) or a state (such as exist). The words "run", "keep", and "feel" are all verbs.
In English there are eight main parts of speech: noun, verb, adjective, adverb, pronoun, preposition, conjunction and finally interjection.
My Japanese teacher used to use a song to help us remember verb conjugations. No one really sang along.
This sentence is in the present perfect. 'have' is not a verb, but an auxiliary verb.
The verb "to downdate" does not exist in the English lexicon, but let's go ahead and coin it anyway.
It's funny how German can take a verb, cut it in half, and spread it over a five-clause sentence.