Yes
The verb in the sentence is "is", a form of the verb to be.The verb "is' is functioning as a linking verb. A linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object restates the subject (soccer = game).
The English word "game" is not a noun but a verb since it describes an action.
No it is not. The word game is typically a noun or noun adjunct (game day, game ball, game hunting) or a verb (to play a game). There is a colloquial verb to game meaning to manipulate.
I believe the answer would be D. They won the game. "They" is the subject, "won" is the verb, and "game" is the direct object.
Because you play a game of soccer and play is the verb in the sentence.
im playing a video game playing is the verb
No, the word 'game' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective (not an adverb).Examples:The game starts at six today. (noun)Are you game for a swim? (verb)We set out the game pieces and took our seats. (adjective)An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Example: The game always starts at six.
The verb in the sentence is "appears." It is the action being described in the sentence.
were getting is the verb phrase.
Appears. Appears is a form of the verb appear
"Can show" is the verb phrase
The word 'game' is a noun (game, games):The name of the game is football!The word 'game' is an adjective (game, more game, most game):My game knee is giving me trouble today.The word 'game' is a verb (game, games, gaming, gamed):Some large companies try to game the market.