yes it is the third person singular form of tell.
Use tells when the subject is he/she/i or a singular noun. eg
He tells lies -- he is the subject
The doctor tells good stories -- doctor is a singular noun subject
Adverbs tell more about verbs. "Usually" is the adverb in your sentence, and it tells us how often adverbs modify verbs.
Action verbs express what the subject is doing. For example, Tim is running to the toy store.
Alive Verbs are The ones,that tells us,what going on,and what happening's gives the reader an high quality image of any special kind of action.
Adverbs modify verbs and explain how the verb happened. For example, you might say "Tomorrow we are going to buy Christmas presents for our friends." "Tomorrow" tells when.
For is not a verb it is a preposition or a conjunction
Yes, and 'action verb' tells what the subject was doing; a linking verb most often tells who or what the subject is. Examples:Action:Jim ate his dinner and then watched TV.I bought this book today.My friend Helen is from Germany.Linking:Mandy is my sister.His feet were wet and muddy.My friend Helen is German.
Alive Verbs are The ones,that tells us,what going on,and what happening's gives the reader an high quality image of any king of action.
I am not sure what you mean by thinking verbs, maybe you mean state verbs.It is not that one kind of verb is more effective than the other. Both kinds of verb are effective if used in the right context eg:I ran the race. -- This sentence tells us 'I' took part in a race. Ran is an action verb.I liked the race. -- This sentence tells how 'I' felt about the race. Liked is a state verbBoth verbs convey something about the race both do the job they are chosen to do, ran is not more effective than liked.
Alive Verbs are The ones,that tells us,what going on,and what happening's gives the reader an high quality image of any king of action.
Normal verbs, abstract verbs, posession verbs, emotion verbs and mixed verbs
I believe it is "were". Some verbs that we use all the time do not show action. These verbs tells us that something is, was, or will be. The most common nonaction verb is be. This verb has many different forms, such as am, is are, was were, shall be, will be, have been , has been, and had been.
Be verbs, present tense be verbs. I am He is/she is/it is