The past form is stayed so it is a regular verb.
Yes, stayed, the past participle of stay, is an action and therefore a verb.
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
Yes! You can say I stayed, she chose to stay home, or something like that.
YES.
Stays is the third person singular form of stay it is used for he/she/it and singular noun subjects:
He/she stays at school everyday.
The teacher stays at school until 6:00pm.
Jon stays at school until 6:00pm
Yes.
you must do be hurry put click shut up stay say
The imperative verbs are: listen, eat, run, sit, stand, jump, write, read, speak, think, come, go, stay, sleep, wake.
Appear became feel grow look remain sound set stay taste
sit,stand,suffer,say,said,shout,stay.
Examples of linking verbs include "am," "is," "are," "was," "were," "become," "seem," and "appear." Examples of helping verbs include "can," "will," "shall," "could," "would," "should," and "may."
No. All forms of to be (am, is, are, was were, been) are linking verbs, but there are also others, such as to stay, remain, grow.
The 5 types of verbs are: action verbs (e.g., run), linking verbs (e.g., is), helping verbs (e.g., have), modal verbs (e.g., can), and phrasal verbs (e.g., give up).
12 infinitive verbs are: to feel to taste to look to smell to appear to become to grow to remain to seem to sound to stay to be (is, am, are, was, were, be, being, been) This is what I found in my grammar book.
Be verbs, present tense be verbs. I am He is/she is/it is
The two kinds of verbs are linking verbs and verbs.
Popular linking verbs, but not necessarily the most popular because it all depends on who you are, where you come from and the power of your vocabulary are - am were, does, get, was, look, must, taste, stay, smell, sound, seem, keep, act.
-were -was -am -are -is