agenda
analogy
approach
argument
author
authority
being
building
case
cavalcade
child
clothes
coach
condition
course
day
defence
definition
dish
drawing
empire
family
figure
first
food
for
friend
group
hearse
house
innkeeper
jug
lady
law
lawyer
licence
line
man
mayor
messenger
morning
need
number
outline
pair
piece
preamble
principle
problem
procession
real
recommendation
regulation
relationship
requirement
right
rule
series
sister
standard
system
table
theory
troop
view
while
will
The verb set out, the main part of a sentence.
A verb is a part of speech that occurs in each sentence. It expresses an action (open, play, push, read, ride) or describes a certain state (guess, hate, hear, imagine, impress). Moreover, there are auxiliary verbs. In a sentence they have only a grammatical meaning.
Verbs are inflected for tenses. There are three groups of tenses, past, present and future. Past tenses reflect previous acvivities that took place, present describes actions that are happening now, while future tenses show predicted or planned activeness.
For more information referring to verbs we recommend to visit Wikipedia.
Below, there are examples of nouns used with the verb 'set out':
- agenda
- analogy
- approach
- argument
- author
Last updated: Nov 8, 2024
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