is a apple a verb
reaches
The word 'has' is a verb and is often used in a verb phrase. examples: She has an apple. (simple present) He has a new car. (simple present) He has phoned three times today. (present perfect) She has eaten an apple. (present perfect)
"The" is an article in both occurrences; "apple" is a noun, "is" is a verb, "on" is a preposition, and "ground" is a noun.
Actually, yes, a verb can be transitive and intransitive depending on the sentence. The verb eat, for example, is transitive in this sentence: "I ate an apple," but is intransitive in this one: "Lindsay already ate."Other verbs can be both as well, such as "play," "clean," and "read."Verbs are transitive when they precede a direct object, and they are intransitive when they do not.
In that sentence,, the word "green" is functioning as an adjective, describing the noun "apple" as a predicate adjective (subject complement) following the linking verb "is" (apple = green).
An apple is an object (a noun), it's not a verb so it can't have any tenses.
He ate the apple. the subject in the sentence is "he". the subject is what is doing the job. the predicate in the sentence is "ate the apple". the predicate is what the subject is doing(verb) and everything that follows it. the verb in the sentence is "ate". the verb is what does the action.
reaches
It is the verb to eat. For example i am going to eat an apple. Yesterday I ate an apple.
I is at the beginning of a sentence, and me is somewhere else in the sentence. Ex. I ate an apple. An apple was eaten by me.
No, apple is a noun not an adverb. An adverb describes a verb or how an action was done; she ran fast, fast is the adverb.
Good is not a verb - you cannot good something or someone eg - She good an apple - is not correct
He as well as John likes apple- cause if the object is singular, the verb is plural
If you refer to "slice" as in "slicing an apple", that is the verb "Kiru".
The past tense of bite is bit.I bite the apple. Present formI bit the apple. Past form
The word 'has' is a verb and is often used in a verb phrase. examples: She has an apple. (simple present) He has a new car. (simple present) He has phoned three times today. (present perfect) She has eaten an apple. (present perfect)
"The" is an article in both occurrences; "apple" is a noun, "is" is a verb, "on" is a preposition, and "ground" is a noun.