Safe is not a verb. It is an adjective. This is because it describes nouns. For example,
"This is a safe place" - 'safe' describes the noun 'place'.
A verb is a word that describes action for the most part. So examples of some verbs are run, jump, fighting, skiing, being, talked, screamed.
These are just parts of speech that might be worthwhile to review briefly.
Verb
It depends if you are talking about the position safety, or the defensive scoring play known as a safety. For the position, defensive back would work For the play, I do not know of another name.
It RAINS for the whole weekend so the fish were safe for another week is not grammatically correct. Rains is present tense; were safe is past tense.Correct: It rained for the whole weekend so the fish were safe for another week.
The plural for safe is safes.This is in reference to the word "safe" meaning a repository for one's valuables, e.g. a bank safe. "None of the safes were broken into."The word safe is also an adjective (safe, safer, safest). "Is this a safe website?"In the English language, adjectives do not have a plural form."The kid is safe. The kids are safe."
Yes, protect, meaning to keep safe from harm, is an action and therefore a verb.A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
There is no verb form for safe.
The adjective safe is based on the verb "save" and the adverb form would be 'safely'.
Save
"Safe" is not a verb, so it doesn't have a past form. "Safe" can be an adjective or a noun. In case you mean the verb "save"; it is regular, so the past is "saved".
safeno verb form - safety is a noun or adjectiveto be safe
Well it depends on what what the word safe is doing in the sentence.
Verb 3====D - - -
I am not sure but i think the verb is "waterproofed" - but that means your sentence lack the -ed in waterproof. If not then I don't think there is verb
Verb
--> In the English language adjectives do NOT have a plural form. Therefore, you can say: "The kid is safe. The kids are safe."The verb changes, but the adjective does not.
It RAINS all right, for the whole weekend, so the fish were safe for another week.
--> In the English language adjectives do NOT have a plural form.Therefore, you can say: "The kid is safe. The kids are safe."The verb changes, but the adjective does not.The noun safe is singular; safes is the plural noun. "None of the safes were broken into."The word safe is also an adjective (safe, safer, safest). "Is this a safe website?"Therefore, when it is a noun it can have a plural form.When it is a verb, it changes according to the tenses. (save, saves, saved, saving).But when it is an adjective it does not change:In the English language, adjectives do not have a plural form."The kid is safe. The kids are safe."