Amhavedo is not a recognized term in standard grammar or linguistics; it may be a typographical error or a specific term from a niche context. If you meant "am" and "have" as auxiliary verbs in English, they are used to form various tenses, moods, and voices. "Am" is a form of the verb "to be," while "have" serves as a perfect aspect auxiliary, indicating completed actions. If you meant something else, please clarify for a more accurate response.
No, kind is an adjective. Verbs are things you can "do". I can run. I can jump. run and jump are verbs. Adjectives are things you can "be". I can be kind. I can be mean. kind and mean are adjectives.
Will, would, shall, should, can, could, may, might, must are the Modal verbs.
The word 'kind' is an adjective. Only verbs have tenses.
It depends what the verb is. there are linking verbs, helping verbs. So yeah kind of though.
fixed-form helping verbs
it follows verbs such as am is were was and are
Be, Have, Do
Adverbs modify adjectives. Verbs don't modify, they show an action or state of being.
kind
Past, present, and future are not verbs but rather tenses that can be applied to verbs to indicate when an action is taking place. Verbs themselves are words that express an action, occurrence, or state of being.
Poking, peeing, pulling, pushing!!
To write