She may enjoy his company. This is not a mystery.
I/you/we/they enjoy. He/she/it enjoys. The present participle is enjoying.
This is a fallacy known as hasty generalization, where a conclusion is drawn based on insufficient evidence or a small sample size. It assumes that because one person enjoys something, everyone in the same category must also enjoy it, which is not necessarily true.
The word "enjoy" is a verb.
she enjoys writting
Enjoys is not a noun, it's a verb (enjoy, enjoys, enjoying, enjoyed). The noun form is enjoyment (singular) and enjoyments (plural).
The verb of enjoyable is enjoy.Other verbs are enjoys, enjoying and enjoyed.Some example sentences are:"I enjoy ice cream"."She enjoys Nutella spread on toast"."I am enjoying this music"."I enjoyed the film last night".
I/you/we/they enjoy. He/she/it enjoys. The present participle is enjoying.
The word 'enjoy' is not a noun. The word enjoy is a verb: enjoy, enjoys, enjoying, enjoyed.The noun form for the verb to enjoy is enjoyment.
who of the following enjoy constitutional position
enjoy / enjoys / enjoyed / enjoying
No, the word 'enjoy' is a verb, a word for an action (enjoy, enjoys, enjoying, enjoyed).The noun forms of the verb to enjoy are enjoyment and the gerund, enjoying (both are common nouns).