A verb phrase is made up of a verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.
Examples:
Jack runs. (the verb is 'runs', the subject is 'Jack')
My brother Jack runs. (the verb is 'runs', the subject is the noun phrase 'my brother Jack')
Jack runs daily. (the verb phrase is the verb 'runs' and the adverb 'daily')
Jack runs to school. (the verb phrase is the verb 'runs' and the prepositional phrase 'to school')
Jack runs the print shop. (the verb phrase is the verb 'runs' and the direct object 'the print shop', a noun phrase)
Jack runs everything in the print shop. (the verb phrase is the verb 'runs', the direct object 'everything', and the prepositional phrase 'in the print shop', which modifies the direct object)
A phrase is a group of words that functions as a unit within a sentence but does not contain a subject and a verb together to express a complete thought. It can be a noun phrase, verb phrase, or prepositional phrase, among others.
Made can be an action verb in past tense as long as it is in a verb phrase.
An infinitive. The entire phrase, including the "to", is usually considered as a verb form.
was missing is a verb phrase. It is made up of two verbs - be verb + present participle
"Was believed" is a verb phrase made up of the past tense verb "was" and the past participle "believed." The main verb in the phrase is "believed," while "was" serves as an auxiliary verb indicating the past tense.
No, "were held" is not a compound word. It is a verb phrase made up of the auxiliary verb "were" and the main verb "held."
No. A phrasal verb is made up of a verb - usually an action verb - plus a preposition or an adverb eg look out grow up stand up put off put down
Yes, "picked up" is a verb phrase formed by the verb "picked" and the adverb "up."
Have done is a verb phrase. It's made up of the verb have, which is being used as an auxiliary verb, and the past participle done. It creates the present perfect tense of do.I/We/You/They have doneHe/She/It has done
It is a verb phrase because it consists of two words:has = third person singular form of have.passed = past participle of pass.Has passed is present perfect tense.Example: The train has passed the station.
The phrase "is not" is a verb phrase using the verb (is) and the adverb (not).
The verb phrase in the sentence is "are the cripple on the corner."