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both, depending on the context
No. In is a preposition.
A subject follows a linking or action verb. A predicate noun or predicate adjective can follow a linking verb. An indirect object is the noun that can follow an action verb.
Yes, a subject complement follows a linking verb and not an action verb.
yes
A predicate nominative follows a linking verb.
"Go off" is not a verb. "Go" is a verb, but "off" is a preposition. However, "go" is an action verb.
Throughout isn't any kind of verb. It's an adverb and a preposition.
A noun can follow both a linking verb and an action verb. When it follows a linking verb, it's called a predicate nominative. Ex: Henry is a teacher. When a noun follows an action verb, it's called a direct object. Ex: Kevin threw the ball.
No, "it is" is not a preposition. It is a pronoun (it) and a linking verb (to be).
no
Yes,it does because a verb ,verbs phrases and action verbs are the same.