No, it is an adjective.
It can be used after the words "to be", but cannot stand alone as a verb.
No, because an action verb is something showing "action" like run, jump, hop or any of those but great is a adverb.
Not usually. The word "great" is an adjective as is used to describe a noun.Example: "He is a great athlete".You may be able to use it informally as an adverb as in: "He did great." Here, "great" would describe a verb (did). The formal adverb is "greatly" e.g. "He has greatly improved as a writer."
Yes, it is a verb, or at least a type of verb. Experienced is a linking verb.
A verb is an action word. 'He' is a pronoun. There are no verb variations for 'he'.
The verb
"great " is noun
"is" is the verb.
The verb is makes.
The verb in that sentence would be the word is, which is the third-person singular present tense form of the verb to be.
No, because an action verb is something showing "action" like run, jump, hop or any of those but great is a adverb.
The verb form of "venerable" is "venerate." It means to regard with great respect, honor, or reverence.
Singular. America is a great country (singular) vs. America are a great country (plural - wrong)
Have
Frustrating can be a verb and an adjective. Verb: The past tense of the verb 'frustrate'. Adjective: Causing annoyance by great difficulty.
began is action verb in 1929 is predicate
No, the word 'history' is not a verb - it's a noun. Example: "I've always had a great interest in history."
There are a great many strong verbs that you can use for the word came. You can use the verb appeared.