No.
Never is an adverb of frequency.
"Never" is often used in sentences to indicate a negative frequency adverb that modifies the verb in the verb phrase. It does not directly form part of the verb phrase itself.
The phrase "to be" is an infinitive verb phrase in English.
"Was given" is a verb phrase that functions as the past tense of the verb "to give."
"You will" is a verb phrase consisting of the modal verb "will" and the pronoun "you."
are going is a verb phrase. Are is a be verb, going is a present participle (verb).
Yes, "can" is a modal verb that can be used as part of a verb phrase to indicate ability or permission. For example, in the phrase "can swim," "can" is the helping verb that expresses the ability to swim.
Has been is the verb phrase. It's is a contraction for it has, and never is an adverb and not part of the verb phrase.
verb phrase = could have moved (never is an adverb and not part of the verb phrase)The verb phrase in 'We could never have moved that tree by ourselves,' is 'have moved.'
verb phrase = could have moved (never is an adverb and not part of the verb phrase)The verb phrase in 'We could never have moved that tree by ourselves,' is 'have moved.'
The verb phrase is 'could have moved' (never is an adverb modifying the verb).One problem with the sentence is that the antecedent (subject: you) and the reflexive pronoun (ourselves) do not agree. The following are corrected antecedent agreement:You could never have moved that tree by yourselves.We could never have moved that tree by ourselves.
Understand is the verb, never understand is the verb phrase.
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "will never understand physics".This is a tricky one because part of the verb (will) is hidden in the contraction "I'll".The subject of the sentence is I.
The verb phrase is "will understand" (the 'll is the contraction form)."Will understand" is the verb phrase. I'll is a contraction of I and will, never is an adverb.
"Had seen" is the verb phrase. Never is an adverb.
"Had seen" is the verb phrase. "Never" is an adverb.
"Will understand" is the verb phrase. I'll is a contraction of I and will; never is an adverb.
"will visit" is a verb phrase. "usually" is an adverb and not part of the verb.
The verb is "to see" and the verb phrase is "had seen."