A gurn or chuck is a distorted facial expression, and a verb to describe the action.
In modern English usage, the verb to troll describes a fishing technique of slowly dragging a lure or baited hook from a moving boat.
A similar but distinct verb, "to trawl," describes the act of dragging a fishing net (not a line).
The difference can be categorized by saying that stative verbs are static or unchanging throughout their entire duration, whereas dynamic verbs describe a process that changes over time.
An analogy to natural language word orders by using such terms as "subject", "verb", and "object" cannot accurately describe the nature of Lojban bridi.
The verbs describing the spider, "A Noiseless Patient Spider," are themselves symbols of the speaker's seeming satisfaction that he may show to the outside.
In those days "kabuku" was not yet a noun, and the verb described outrageous behavior, anything offbeat or oddball.
The result is that verbs must be described by a set of principal parts, each listing the method of forming a given category in that verb.
So for example the verb "he/she kills him/her/them", might describe a bear killing a moose, in which case "it kills it" would be a better English translation.
Stative verbs describe the state of being of the person, place, animal, or thing that is being spoken about.