Yes, it a form of the verb "to net." But it is also a plural noun.
caught = a verb - the past of catch in = a preposition nets = a noun - the plural of net
No, pile is a verb and a noun. verb: The nets were loosely piled on the Vancouver Island pier. noun: Take care not to trip over the pile of nets.
"were caught" is the verb.
There is not a linking verb in the sentence "Thousands of years ago, fish were caught in nets and traps."A linking verb is one that connects the subject to more information about the subject (subject complement). Example: They were happy when the plane landed after a turbulent flight. Were is the linking verb connecting the subject, they, to the subject compliment, happy.An auxiliary verb (helping verb) helps another verb complete the verb phrase. In the predicate were caught, were is an auxiliary verb.
The word net is a noun. The plural noun is nets. Net can also be a verb.
"In" is a preposition. It is used to indicate location, position, or time in a sentence.
Thousands - noun of - preposition years - noun ago - adverb fish - noun were - verb (auxiliary) caught - verb (past participle) in - preposition nets - noun and - conjunction traps - noun
Jay-Z is a part owner of the New Jersey Nets. alot of people confuse the NEW JERSEY NETS to the NEW YORK NETS but theres no such thing as the ''NEW YORK NETS''
The two words 'and traps' are a (a) conjunction (and) and a plural noun (traps).The conjunction 'and' joins the compound object of the preposition 'in' (nets and traps).
there are 5 nets
Nets.
It has 8 nets to it