Yes it does. For example: Fred as well as Bob like the pie. Rather than: Bob likes the pie, or Fred likes the pie. The phrase "as well as" is used as an "and". This means that all verbs will be made plural.
In the sentence "He has always thought about his future," the verb phrase is "has always thought." While "thought" is the verb, a verb phrase includes words that may affect the tense of the verb.
In the sentence "He has always thought about his future," the verb phrase is "has always thought." While "thought" is the verb, a verb phrase includes words that may affect the tense of the verb.
A verb is one word - I am sick today. She livesnext door. - verbs in bold.A verb phrase has two or more words - We have eaten the cake. I have been waiting to see you.action verb
The phrase "is not" is a verb phrase using the verb (is) and the adverb (not).
The verb phrase in the sentence is "are the cripple on the corner."
"Is should be" is not a correct verb phrase in English grammar. "Is" is a linking verb and "should be" is a modal verb phrase. A correct verb phrase would be "is eating" or "is sleeping."
The verb "to be" is the main verb in a linking verb phrase, while any other action verb in the phrase indicates an action verb phrase. Linking verbs connect the subject to a subject complement, while action verbs show an action performed by the subject.
The verb phrase is the verb (action) of the sentence, along with any helper verbs, forms of to be, to have, or to do.Examples:The boy has written a book. (verb to write, verb phrase has written)Bill will be visiting the farm. (verb to visit, verb phrase will be visiting)He does go to school. (verb to go, verb phrase does go)
"Who roamed" is not a verb phrase; it is a subject-verb combination where "who" is the subject and "roamed" is the verb. A verb phrase typically consists of a main verb along with auxiliary verbs or helping verbs.
yes. A passive verb phrase.
Yes it's a verb phrase.
The verb is "play" and the verb phrase is "can play."