A verb is the action in the sentance. I will feel the pain in the morning.
The verb is "will write"-- we use the helping verb "will" to show that the action (in this case, "write") occurs in the future tense.
This Is How You Write ''Feel'' As An Action Verb: I Felt it. So Use Felt To Assume Its An Action Verb
matched
The "Y" in you should not be capitalized and while it takes only a noun and a verb to make a sentence - which "I write you" has - it isn't a correct sentence because the tense of the verb is incorrect. "I will write you" would be a correct sentence with the correct verb tense. You could begin a sentence, albeit it sounds a bit odd, with the words "I write you" as in "I write you this letter today in an attempt to appeal to your empathetic side", however "I write you" is not a correct sentence alone.
I am not adverse to travel
Feel is the linking verb because it corresponds with the word comfortable. FEEL COMFORTABLE!
"Was writing" is a helping verb (to be) and an action verb (to write). The words "was writing" functions as a verb in a sentence.
I secured the gate.
Feel can be both an action and a helping verb. For example in the sentence Yeri feels sleepy after running a mile. In this sentence, feel is a linking verb. This is because feelsconnects the subject, Irene, to her state of being, which is sleepy. An easy way to remember if a verb is a linking verb is if you can replace the verb with "=" or "seem".
The verb in the sentence is "written," which is the past participle form of the verb "write."
In this kind of sentence, "how" is usually considered an adverb, modifying the verb infinitive "to write".
You can't write a sentence that is not a sentence, it is either a sentence or it is not. You can write a sentence that doesn't look like a sentence. For example, "Stop!"; although one word, it is a complete sentence. The subject 'you' is implied, the verb is 'stop', which makes it a complete sentence.