Never isn't a verb, so a sentence with it as a verb would be grammatically incorrect.
No, "You hate waiting in line" is a complete sentence. The verb is "hate".
No. It is an adjective.An adverb is a descriptive word that modifies a verb. 'Unfamiliar' does not modify a verb (e.g. the sentence "Dave unfamiliar glanced at Karen, who scowled" does not make sense, because 'unfamiliar' isn't an adverb), and therefore is not an adverb. In a sentence that uses 'unfamiliar': "Dave gave Karen an unfamiliar glance," 'unfamiliar' is modifying 'glance,' a noun, not 'gave,' the verb. Therefore, one may conclude that 'unfamiliar' is an adjective, not an adverb.
Adverb. It modifies the verb. If something will "never" happen, it describes when something happen: never.
An adverb is a descriptive word that modifies a verb. 'Other side' does not modify a verb (eg the sentence "Dave other side glanced at Karen, who melted" does not make sense, because 'other side' isn't an adverb), and therefore is not an adverb. In a sentence that uses 'other side': "Dave met Karen at the other side of the park," 'other' is modifying 'side,' a noun, and 'side' is simply a noun, as it is a place, not a description of a verb. (Other is an adjective.)
No. Numbers are all nouns, whereas a verb would also be needed in order to make a sentence. The number "100,204,180" represents the words "one hundred million two hundred four thousand one hundred eighty".
The verb is - get on with = a phrasal verb.
The verb is 'have been', the adverb is 'never'.
after the verb
A sentence simply had a verb? Oh boy!
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "will never understand physics".This is a tricky one because part of the verb (will) is hidden in the contraction "I'll".The subject of the sentence is I.
Had is the auxiliary verb, and met is the main verb.
That sentence does not have a direct object. The verb needs to be transitive (a type of action verb) for the sentence to contain a direct object. "Is" is never a transitive verb because it's not an action. "Is" is a linking verb in that sentence.
will understand is the verb phrase.never is an adverb
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.
verb phrase = could have moved (never is an adverb and not part of the verb phrase)The verb phrase in 'We could never have moved that tree by ourselves,' is 'have moved.'
verb phrase = could have moved (never is an adverb and not part of the verb phrase)The verb phrase in 'We could never have moved that tree by ourselves,' is 'have moved.'
will understand. Never is an adverb of frequency but it comes before the main verb understand