Enjoy.
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.
she enjoys writting
The word "enjoy" is a verb.
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.
enjoy / enjoys / enjoyed / enjoying
who of the following enjoy constitutional position
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).