The two words 'and traps' are a (a) conjunction (and) and a plural noun (traps).
The conjunction 'and' joins the compound object of the preposition 'in' (nets and traps).
A. The conjunction is and;
B. The prepositions are of and in;
C. There is no pronoun in the sentence;
D. The verb is were caught.
There is not a linking verb in the sentence "Thousands of years ago, fish were caught in nets and traps."A linking verb is one that connects the subject to more information about the subject (subject complement). Example: They were happy when the plane landed after a turbulent flight. Were is the linking verb connecting the subject, they, to the subject compliment, happy.An auxiliary verb (helping verb) helps another verb complete the verb phrase. In the predicate were caught, were is an auxiliary verb.
The meaning of adeverb is jshdshfge
There: adverb are: linking verb, present tense pretty: adjective flowers: common noun in: preposition your: possessive pronoun, 2nd person garden: common noun however: subordinating conjunction they: personal pronoun, 3rd person don't (do not): do: helping verb; not: adverb smell: linking verb, present tense very: adverb good: adjective
Usually an adjective or a functional adjective such as a participle, but sometimes the preposition "like", the conjunction "as if", the infinitive "to be", or a noun, as in "He seems the personification of cowardice". This last example has a faint whiff of obsolescence, because most persons now would instead say, "He seems to be the personification of cowardice".
The sentence in which the verb is a linking verb uses the verb to connect the subject of the verb to more information about the subject. The linking verb will not express an action.
In the sentence, "Catching fish is one of the oldest pastimes.":the preposition = of;the verb = is (a linking verb).There is no conjunction or adverb in the sentence.
There is not a linking verb in the sentence "Thousands of years ago, fish were caught in nets and traps."A linking verb is one that connects the subject to more information about the subject (subject complement). Example: They were happy when the plane landed after a turbulent flight. Were is the linking verb connecting the subject, they, to the subject compliment, happy.An auxiliary verb (helping verb) helps another verb complete the verb phrase. In the predicate were caught, were is an auxiliary verb.
A conjunction is a word linking other words, phrases, or clauses in a sentence.
The word "at" is not considered a linking verb. It is a preposition that is used to indicate location or position. The word "in," on the other hand, can function as a preposition, linking verb, or adverb depending on its usage in a sentence.
For is not a verb it is a preposition or a conjunction
There is no preposition in the sentence "The plane was late." The - article plane - noun (subject) was - linking verb late - predicate adjective
"To" is not a linking verb. It is a preposition that is used to show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and another word in the sentence. Examples of linking verbs include "is," "am," "are," "was," "were," "become," "seem," and "feel."
No, "it is" is not a preposition. "It is" is a phrase that typically functions as a subject-verb pairing in a sentence. Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence.
In is actually a preposition. Verbs are actions or they may be linking verbs. Linking verbs link two nouns such as smart and girl. (ex. The girl is smart.) Is is the linking verb. Prepositional are things that you can remove from a sentence and it still makes sense. (ex. above, under, with, without, in, and out)
The conjunction word linking "echo" and "pot" could be "and".
No, in the example sentence, the word 'is' is a linking verb.A linking verb acts as an equal sign, the object of a linking verb restates or renames the subject (catching fish = pastime).
An object of the preposition is a noun that ends the prepositional phrase as in the following sentence: She looked at the nurse. The prepositional phrase is "at the nurse." The preposition is "at" and the objective if the preposition is "nurse." A predicate nominative follows a linking verb and renames the subject as in the following sentence: My sister is a nurse. The linking verb is "is" and the predicate nominative is "nurse" which renames the subject "sister."