No it can not it would be a adverb
The word beneficiary is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word fora person who benefits or is expected to benefit from something.
The word could've is a contraction, a combination of the verb forms 'could' and 'have'. The word could've functions as an auxiliary (helper) verb; for example:You could have come with us. Or, You could've come with us.When 'could have' is used as the main verb (transitive), could as the auxiliary and have as the main verb, the contraction isn't used:You could have cake or you couldhave pie.
Yes, it's a modal verb.
"Could" is a verb. It's the past tense of the verb"can'. The verb "could" most often functions as an auxiliary (helping) verb expressing "ability" to do something.A preposition is a word used to connect its object to another word in the sentence.Example: Jack could memorize all his lines in a day.the verb "could" is the auxiliary verb; the verb "memorize" is the main verb;the noun "day" is the object of the preposition"in".
could isn't a verb, coz you can't 'could' something. you can't 'could'. a verb is a doing word..like you can run, jump, write..but you can't could
It could be:a be verb = am waiting, is kept.an auxiliary verb = have been waiting.a modal auxiliary verb = could have been waiting.
A beneficiary is a person or group that receives benefits so a sentence you could use would be something like, "The beneficiary of the million dollar check was quite happy," or something to that extent.
The antonym of beneficiary is benefactor.
No, the word "could've" is a verb contraction; a shortened form of "could have".
The word could've is a contraction, a shortened form for could have.The contraction could've functions as a verb (or auxiliary verb).Example:We could have taken the early train.OR:We could've taken the early train.
The word verb describes a persons action. Examples could be running, walking, etc.
verb. Depends on usage. In most instances is a verb, as in they were playing. But in the phrase such as playing field it's an adjective