Yes it is eg. That creepy guy followed me home (past tense) I follow Lady Gaga on twitter (present tense) I will follow my cat to see where it goes (future tense) although it can be used to mean after eg. Following dinner we had a lovely conversation.
Yes, "following" can be a verb when it indicates the action of moving or coming after something or someone in sequence, order, or time. Additionally, "following" can also function as a participle or gerund in different grammatical constructions.
Yes it is it's also past tense.
yes because its something your doing...
The subject is he, and the verb is was.
laughing: verb distracts: verb Me: noun
"After" is a preposition, not an action verb. It is commonly used to indicate the time following an action or event.
Subject: Doyle Verb: Studied
The tense of the verb "attend" is future tense.
There is no action verb. The verb "is" (to be) is a linking verb.
The linking verb "is."
The subject is he, and the verb is was.
Yes, it can be. (e.g. the following day)Following is the present participle of the verb to follow. It can be used as a verb, an adjective, or a noun (gerund).
"It" is a singular subject so it requires a singular verb. Any plural verb following "it" is incorrect (unless "it" is part of a compound subject).
A transitive verb has an immediately following object which can be converted into the subject of a corresponding passive verb. For instance "has" in the preceding sentence is not transitive, because the following is not grammatical: *"An immediately following object is had by a transitive verb."
The subject is "my cat" and there is no action verb. The linking verb is "is" (to be).
The verb is walking.
laughing: verb distracts: verb Me: noun
Moved is the verb.
The verb is Kindness
was