No. It is two auxilary verbs. "Should" is a modal auxilary, and "have" is the auxilary used to make the perfect aspect.
"Should have" can be used with linking verbs (he should have been happy) or with action verbs (he should have driven), but is itself neither.
Yes, the sentence "It should have a linking verb" is correct. The linking verb "should" connects the subject "It" to the action "have," indicating that something is expected or recommended.
"It" is not a linking verb. "It" is a pronoun.
The sentence is "Shelly should have been more careful on the path." The complete linking verb is "should have been."
"Is" is a linking verb. Linking verbs are used to connect the subject of a sentence to a noun or adjective that renames or describes the subject.
"Is should be" is not a correct verb phrase in English grammar. "Is" is a linking verb and "should be" is a modal verb phrase. A correct verb phrase would be "is eating" or "is sleeping."
"Was" is a linking verb. It is used to connect the subject of a sentence to a subject complement that describes or renames the subject.
I think the linking verb is should. Have is the helping verb and should links it into the sentence properly.
No. The verb to become is a linking verb, and the verb to be is a linking verb, but they are two separate verbs.
Was is a linking verb.
"Has" can function as both a linking verb and a helping verb. As a linking verb, it connects the subject to a subject complement that renames or describes it (e.g., "She has been a teacher for 10 years"). As a helping verb, it is used with a main verb to form a verb phrase (e.g., "She has eaten dinner").
Linking verb
"Did" is not a linking verb.
"Was" is a linking verb. It is used to connect the subject of a sentence to a subject complement that describes or renames the subject.
"Was" is a helping verb that is used with other verbs to indicate tense. For example, in the sentence "She was running," "was" is helping the main verb "running."
"It" is not a linking verb. "It" is a pronoun.
Linking verb.Were is the past tense plural be verb any form of be verb is a linking verb.
action, it is the past tense of the verb surround.
The verb "appear" is a linking verb in this sentence because it connects the subject "girls" with the predicate adjective "excited." It describes a state of being rather than an action.