To believe is a main verb.
auxilery verb
There are four kinds of verb 1 - transative verb 2 intransative verb 3 Auxilary verb 4 main verb
The verb 'believe' is a main verb, which may have an auxiliary verb. Examples: I believe that we've met before. (verb) You can believe what he tells you. (main verb with 'can' as the auxiliary verb)
No. It is two auxilary verbs. "Should" is a modal auxilary, and "have" is the auxilary used to make the perfect aspect. "Should have" can be used with linking verbs (he should have been happy) or with action verbs (he should have driven), but is itself neither.
Discovered can be a main verbs, such as in "I discovered a staple in my tuna fish sandwich." However, it is not the main verb in "Many people falsely believe that Christopher Columbus discovered America" because believe is the main verb of that sentence.
imong oten
Latin did not have a word for 'should.' In fact, they they did not use auxilary verbs as we do in English - no should, did, might, may, will, shall, etc. To convey the same idea, they used different forms of the main verb.
"Tener" is the Spanish verb meaning "to have", as in posession of something. There is a second verb in Spanish, "haber", which means "to have" when used as an auxilary verb for perfect tenses, i.e. "have done".
Usually after the be verb.There are basically four positions:before the subject - Occasionally Jon missed the bus.after the auxilary or be verb - Jon is occasionally late for the bus. Jon has occaisionallymissed the bus.before the main verb - Jon occasionally missed the bus.end of the clause - Jon missed the bus occasionally.It depends on the type of adverb.
Strumming is a main Verb
It is the past tense of the verb "believe".
Possibly you mean a verb phrase, for example: is walking, was listening, have seen, had been, had been walking, will be sent, is being repaired, They are words - verbs and auxilary verbs or modal verbs - that make up the complete verb phrase