yes you can, a very simple sentence. For example he is skipping.
Yes, a verb can be used at the end of a sentence, especially in languages like German and Japanese. This structure is known as a verb-final or verb-end position in linguistic terms.
No, it's a noun. Incidentally, "end of the week" is not a sentence, it is a phrase.
The voice of the verb in the sentence "By the end of the day, the children were tired" is passive. The subject "the children" is being acted upon by the verb "were tired" rather than performing the action themselves.
The voice of the verb "were" in the sentence is passive. This is because the emphasis is on the children being tired rather than on who or what made them tired.
'to be' is a linking verb not an action verb. It expresses a 'state of being'. You are good. You = good 'are' is the second person of 'to be'
Yes, you can end a sentence with the word 'were' since it is a verb that can function as the main verb in a sentence. For example: "I wondered where you were."
A subject, a verb, and a period at the end
It can be, such as in this sentence "I want you to end this right now!" In this sentence, end acts as an action word and therefore serves as a verb
While the verb can be anywhere in a Latin sentence, as often as not it's found at the very end.
"Are" is a verb, even at the end of a sentence. For example, if you say, "Do you know where the scissors are?", "are" is still a verb. In this case, it is the verb of an embedded question. "Scissors" is the subject of the verb "are".
Hand can be a noun referring to the part of the body at the end of the arm, or it can be a verb meaning to pass or give something to someone. The context of the sentence will typically clarify whether it is being used as a noun or a verb.
Verbs don't come at the end of a complete sentence. If you have a command like -- Sit down! -- then this sentence consists of a verb only.