A river runs a river and has a mouth. It obviously cant talk. It has a head and it cant cry. The river has a bed and a river is an inanimate object.
The verbs ending in -s are the third person, singular, present tense. For example:He talks...She walks...It runs...The President speaks...Ms. Adams teaches...Mom chauffeurs...
Walks is a verb. The infinitive form is to walk.
It is somewhat archaic. You could say "Mr. Jones goes out for walks of an evening" which is correct, but which also is not how this idea would usually be conveyed. In modern usage it would be more normal to say, "Mr. Jones goes out for walks in the evening." There are other possible contexts for that phrase as well such as, "Evening is my favorite time of day; I never get tired of an evening."
Creatures that walks on two legs are called bipeds.
no, i don't believe so.
A river!
A river
A river.
A River
This would be a stream, or a river.
a river
The answer is riverA river can run but never walks.It has mouth but never speaks.It has head but never weeps.It has bed but never sleeps.
A River
A doll
a riverriver, river's run, but don't walk. they have mouths, but don't speak. they have river beds but don't sleep.A river~River
A stream runs but never walks and murmurs but never talks.
This would be a stream, or a river.