no, its actually an adjective.
WENT is the verb in that sentence. it is a verb in the past tense, the present form of the word being to go.
The phrase "thousands of years ago" is composed of four words. The first word "thousands" is a plural noun. The second word "of" is a preposition. The third word "years" is another plural noun. The fourth word "ago" is an adjective.
It is an English verb that used to be called "wircan" I think around 1500 years ago which means to function/operate. It originated from the base word "werg" which was used up to 5000 years ago.
No, were is the past plural tense of the verb to be. Ten years ago, we were all younger than we are today.
There is not a linking verb in the sentence "Thousands of years ago, fish were caught in nets and traps."A linking verb is one that connects the subject to more information about the subject (subject complement). Example: They were happy when the plane landed after a turbulent flight. Were is the linking verb connecting the subject, they, to the subject compliment, happy.An auxiliary verb (helping verb) helps another verb complete the verb phrase. In the predicate were caught, were is an auxiliary verb.
the word were is a LINKING VERB.
The word 'be' is indeed a verb.
Yes, the word 'do' is a verb.
Verb 2. A Verb is an action word, a 'doing' word.
Yes.The word WILL is a helping verb.
The Word "carved" is not a verb.
The word been is a verb. It is the past participle of the verb "to be".