A phrase has 2/3 verbs so it cannot be a helping verb. A verb phrase can contain a helping verb.
would = a modal auxiliary verb.
have = auxiliary verb
looked = main verb, past of look
In this verb phrase have is the helping verb
The words "would want" is a verb phrase: helper verb would and main verb want.
No. Delicious is an adjective. looked is the helping verb.
"Wouldn't" is a contraction of "would not." In this case, "would" is the helping verb, indicating a conditional action or future possibility, and "not" is the negative adverb modifying it.
"Had become" is a verb phrase where "had" is an auxiliary (helping) verb and "become" is the main verb. The auxiliary verb "had" indicates the past perfect tense.
It's a verb, a compound verb made from the infinitive stem "be" and the auxiliary "can". In addition, "Can be" can be a helping verb phrase, e.g. "Tom can be helping the younger kids". Can be is helping the verb helping.
Verb Phrase
A verb phrase includes the main verb and any auxiliary (helping) verbs or particles that accompany it. It can also include objects, complements, and adverbs that modify the action of the main verb.
"Looked" can act as either a linking verb or a verb of perception. As a linking verb, it connects the subject to a subject complement that describes or renames the subject. As a verb of perception, it indicates someone is using their eyes to see or observe something.
"find the" is not a verb phrase. It consists of the verb "find" and the direct object "the". A verb phrase typically consists of a main verb and any auxiliary (helping) verbs that accompany it.
"Who roamed" is not a verb phrase; it is a subject-verb combination where "who" is the subject and "roamed" is the verb. A verb phrase typically consists of a main verb along with auxiliary verbs or helping verbs.
A verb phrase consists of a main verb and any auxiliary (helping) verbs that come before or after it. The verb phrase conveys the action or state of being in a sentence.
helping verb ---- The verb and all its modifiers form the '''verb phrase'''.