Yes they are both verbs.
Kids are both to be seen and heard
Music or sound is something that can be heard but not seen.
It may be. Helping verbs are also called auxiliary verbs. BE HAVE etc. ... The are used to "help" main verbs, also called "notional verbs. The two kinds are complementary, but not necessarily exclusive. The phrases "she workS" and "he workED" have no auxiliary, but only a notional (main) verb. These carry the ending for tense (present or past). When auxiliaries are used, the first one carries the tense, and following verbs auxiliary and notional do not. For example: He haS seen ; ... iS seen; haD seen; haS been seen; haD been seen...; he haD been being careless.. "Who DOES/ DID the dishes": here DO is main verb, but in "How do you do?" the first DO is helping verb; the second is main verb.
No, "heard" is not a linking verb. It is a past tense verb indicating the action of perceiving sound through the ears. Linking verbs connect the subject of a sentence to a subject complement, while action verbs express an action performed by the subject.
She is heard but never seen: Heard in (How to Spank A Star; season 3)
In the verb phrase "had heard," "had" is the helping verb, while "heard" is the main verb. Helping verbs, also known as auxiliary verbs, assist the main verb in expressing tense, mood, or voice. In this case, "had" indicates that the action of hearing occurred in the past before another action. The phrase as a whole conveys that she received information about the arrival of the figure skaters.
Water is possibly the only thing that can not be caught but can be seen and heard.
It isn't ! A flash of lightening is seen BEFORE a peal of thunder is heard.
It's seen & NOT heard- It means they should not interfere in adult conversation.
The cast of Seen and Not Heard - 2009 includes: Kyle Merryman
Yes. The conditional phrase "should have been seen" contains a string of auxilary verbs.
These verbs are called irregular verbs. Some examples: eat - ate, run - ran, hear - heard, speak - spoke,