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  • Verb
  • Verb
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  • Verbs or concepts ("doing words") are words that tell a creature to perform an . Push is an example of a verb.
  • Regular Verbs These verbs are easy. Today I talk. Yesterday I talked . I have talked. I am talking . Since these verbs are so easy there are not a lot of websites explaining them or showing long lists of them. Once you know the pattern you have got it.
  • A verb is the name for a doing word. Here are some examples: jumping, running, kicking, punching and kissing.
  • A verb is a type of plant eaten by verbivores. They also like Spam in small doses, but only the Tesco Value version. The real stuff gives them stomach ulcers.
  • In syntax, a verb is a word that represents some form of action, occurrence, or state of being.
  • A verb was a type of word which in syntax conveyed an action, an occurrence or a state of being. In the Bajoran language, the verb "kosst" could be translated as "to be" in the English language. (DS9: "The Assignment") In the Reman language, pictographs represented certain verb roots. (Star Trek Nemesis) In 2152, when a symbiotic lifeform had come aboard Enterprise NX-01, Hoshi Sato suggested to learn its language, but Malcolm Reed told her this wasn't a simple case of learning verbs and nouns, as it wasn't even clear if the lifeform actually had a language. (ENT: "Vox Sola")
  • The verb is part of the Grammar Kingdom, which in this case happens to be all the shit you do in your life. This includes breathing, although this is highly controversial, as a typical fat gym teacher says to you "do something active now or you will fail in life and go to hell forever. PERMANENTLY." As you know by now, "doing something" is pretty much the definition of a verb, but for no reason at all, breathing is excluded. Same goes for existing, talking, staring, scratching your butt, picking your nose, talking, raping, killing, staring, scratching your butt, fighting aliens of the ninth dimension, and existing. If verbs are put in food, it will give off a bitter and strong taste, and will have the same effect as steroids, but much more extreme and dangerous. This kind of verb is obviou
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abstract
  • Verbs or concepts ("doing words") are words that tell a creature to perform an . Push is an example of a verb.
  • Regular Verbs These verbs are easy. Today I talk. Yesterday I talked . I have talked. I am talking . Since these verbs are so easy there are not a lot of websites explaining them or showing long lists of them. Once you know the pattern you have got it.
  • A verb is the name for a doing word. Here are some examples: jumping, running, kicking, punching and kissing.
  • A verb is a type of plant eaten by verbivores. They also like Spam in small doses, but only the Tesco Value version. The real stuff gives them stomach ulcers.
  • The verb is part of the Grammar Kingdom, which in this case happens to be all the shit you do in your life. This includes breathing, although this is highly controversial, as a typical fat gym teacher says to you "do something active now or you will fail in life and go to hell forever. PERMANENTLY." As you know by now, "doing something" is pretty much the definition of a verb, but for no reason at all, breathing is excluded. Same goes for existing, talking, staring, scratching your butt, picking your nose, talking, raping, killing, staring, scratching your butt, fighting aliens of the ninth dimension, and existing. If verbs are put in food, it will give off a bitter and strong taste, and will have the same effect as steroids, but much more extreme and dangerous. This kind of verb is obviously a noun, another family in the Grammar Kingdom. Verbs are divided into two groups: the regular verb, and the adverb, but it could go further into subgroups, such as passive and active verbs. The adverb is part of the Adjective Family, which is also a part of the Grammar Kingdom. Recently, the verb appeared as a lame fad on Nickelodeon, which had a yellow ball as its mascot. Their lame slogan that went with this lame fad was "It's what you do!", which gave off speculation whether or not Captain Obvious had anything to do with this. Currently, the fad disappeared, much to the relief of many. In today's society, verbs are everywhere, because if you don't use verbs, you're dead. This fact has been exploited by many evil people, including but not limited to: children; they are changing words into verbs, thus making more people not dead and increasing the problem of over-population. These pseudo-meanings, (or psumeanings for short,) usually take on the obvious meaning to aid in ease of acceptance. Examples of words changed in such a way include : Water, semicolon, four, oven, backyard and verb itself. and for some reason travis whalen is a douche bag and thats ALSO not considered a verb
  • A verb was a type of word which in syntax conveyed an action, an occurrence or a state of being. In the Bajoran language, the verb "kosst" could be translated as "to be" in the English language. (DS9: "The Assignment") In the Reman language, pictographs represented certain verb roots. (Star Trek Nemesis) In 2152, when a symbiotic lifeform had come aboard Enterprise NX-01, Hoshi Sato suggested to learn its language, but Malcolm Reed told her this wasn't a simple case of learning verbs and nouns, as it wasn't even clear if the lifeform actually had a language. (ENT: "Vox Sola") The same year, Sato had trouble with the transitive verbs of the Denobulan language. (ENT: "Stigma")
  • In syntax, a verb is a word that represents some form of action, occurrence, or state of being.