No, homework is not a verb. The word homework is a noun, an uncountable, common, compound, abstract noun, a word for a thing.
The correct answer is, they are doing their homework now, or they will do their homework now. The word do can be used as an action verb or an auxiliary verb.
"I did my homework." -- that is an example
i have a homework for tomoro and i don't know anything for it and my qestustion is throwing verbs
I don't really know what your question is. However, I think that it is asking this: "Do you do your homework?" Is that a sentence, and why or why not? Yes, that is a sentence. In order to be a sentence, it needs to have two things: a subject and a verb. A verb is an action. In this case, the second "do" is the verb: I do, you do, they do. The subject is whatever is performing the action. In this case, "you" is the subject. So it has a subject and a verb. Hope I helped!
Yes. It is an action, as in 'to complete.' Example: "Every day, she completes her homework."
Yes. It is an action, as in 'to complete.' Example: "Every day, she completes her homework."
It is an action verb.
Direct objects are nouns or pronouns that directly receive the action of the verb. They always answer the question whom or what receives the action verb. Examples: Students should do all their homework. ("homework" answers "what") He gives her a card. (card is a direct object while her is the indirect object.) The police officer is examining the spy.
Did is a verb. It is the past tense of do.I do my homework every night.I did my homework last night.
began is an action verb, not a linking verb.
Did is a verb when it is describing an action.For example:- Shaun did his shoelaces up.- She did her homework quickly.A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
what follows a linking or action verb