The verb form of "save" is "to rescue, protect, or preserve."
Save is a verb; it is something you do. Savings is a noun. Saved can be a verb or an adjective.
The infinitive form of the verb "salvation" is "to save."
No. Saved is a past tense verb, or an adjective. There is no adverb form of save.
Yes, the word 'save' is a verb, a noun, and a preposition.Examples:verb: We save our cans and bottles for recycling.noun: That save was the play that put us in the lead.preposition: Everyone has left save a few stragglers.
Yes, the word 'save' is both a noun (save, saves) and a verb (save, saves, saving, saved).The noun 'save' is a sports term for not allowing an opponent to score.
Rescue.
Save
Yes.
The present perfect tense of the verb "save" is "have saved" (or "has saved" when using it with he, she, or it).
The past tense of save is saved; the future tense is will save.
The sentence fragment, "CANNOT SAVE ALL OF THEM" is a predicate.A predicate is the verb and all of the words related to that verb.A simple predicate is the verb itself (save).A complete predicate is all of the words related to the verb (cannot save all of them).A sentence can have more than one predicate, for example:We cannot save all of them but if we move quickly, we can save some.