Yes, for example: Go, stop...
Sure, here's a sentence with "light" used as a verb: He carefully lit the candles on the birthday cake.
Fragment. It is missing a subject or verb to make it a complete sentence.
The verb in the sentence "How are they different" is "are."
To make a verb from a noun, you can use a process called nominalization. This involves converting the noun into a verb by adding a suffix or modifying the word to indicate an action. For example, from the noun "light," you can create the verb "to light."
The verb is the action word in a sentence that describes what the subject is doing.
No, "How quickly you learn" is a sentence fragment. It lacks a subject and verb to make it a complete sentence.
A sentence simply had a verb? Oh boy!
Never isn't a verb, so a sentence with it as a verb would be grammatically incorrect.
A prism will refract light from the sun causing a rainbow. It is a verb meaning to break up.
Does it have a subject and a verb? The subject is "They" and the verb is "made" so it is a sentence. A proper sentence must have a subject and a verb and make sense.
"Payment" is a noun. In the sentence "You make a payment" the verb is "make". The verb most closely related to "payment" is "pay."
shine the light on me
Did you witness the accident?
use hunting as a verb
make the subject-verb connection and then allow the sentence to paint a picture of the world surrounding that subject and verb
The word "light" is a noun, and the word "bright" describing it is an adjective.
"A sudden flash of light in the night sky." That isn't a sentence at all, since it has no predicate (verb).
It is not a sentence. What are the clowns doing? You must have a noun AND a verb to make a sentence.