Mention is already a verb.
For example "to mention something to someone" is an action and therefore a verb.
Yes, the word 'mention' is both a noun (mention, mentions) and a verb (mention, mentions, mentioning, mentioned).Examples:There was a mention of our opening in the newspaper today. (noun)I will mention your concerns to the contractor. (verb)
I could find it only as a slang verb, with no mention of any other form, but I would guess it is a regular verb = dinked.
The correct spelling is mentioned. It is the past tense form of the verb mention.
A reference to another work or well-known aspect of culture.
The word 'resumed' is not a noun; resumed is the past tense of the verb to resume (resumes, resuming, resumed), which can be a transitive verb or an intransitive verb; for example:Transitive: The game resumed once the thunderstorm had passed.Intransitive: The notice doesn't mention when services will be resumed.
One of these is likely your word: MANSION - (noun) a large house MENTION - (verb, noun) to speak of, or a spoken comment
FIRST of all it is a VERY dirty word, Verb to be exact, referring to torture and something else I do NOT care to mention. Second, WHERE DID YOU HEAR IT?!?!?!?!?!?
There are more than 600 regular verbs. They include accept, allow, applaud, calculate, choke, deny and ignore just but to mention a few.
The word 'anger' is both a verb (anger, angers, angering, angered) and a noun (anger, angers).Examples of the verb 'anger':You know that playing in the street will anger the neighbors.He angers at the least mention of the political situation.Some vandals have been angering the merchants with graffiti.Mother angered my boyfriend by inferring that his gift was cheap.
Both meanings for the verb lying gives you fifty verses in the Bible, including verses such as Revelation 22:15 and John 11:38
The verb of excitement is excite.Other verbs are excites, exciting and excited.Some example sentences are:"I always excite my wife"."The sight of the presents under the three excites the kids"."I plan on exciting my family"."The dog was excited when his owner came home".
Intensive verbs focus on the action itself, while extensive verbs focus on the result or duration of the action. Stative verbs describe a state or condition that is typically not dynamic, while dynamic verbs describe actions or processes that are evolving or in progress.