The word 'fights' would be a noun since 'are' would be the verb
The word 'fights' is both a noun (fight, fights) and a verb (fight, fights, fighting, fought).The noun 'fights' can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.The verb 'fights' can function as a transitive or an intransitive verb.Examples:Their fights are always about money. (noun, subject of the sentence)Those brothers start fights over anything. (noun, direct object of the verb 'start')Jackson fights Johnson in the next match. (verb, transitive; direct object of the verb is 'Johnson')Jackson always fights to win. (verb, intransitive)
No. Your sentence doesn't have a noun or verb at the end of it. The toast always HAS burned crust.
A noun and a verb. "John ran" is a complete sentence because it contains both.
Noun: A feeling of dread washed over her as she anticipated the upcoming exam. Verb: She dreaded having to confront her boss about the mistake.
The predicate of a sentence is everything that is not the subject of the sentence, including the verb. A predicate noun is a noun that is part of the sentence that comes after the verb for the direct object, indirect object, and noun clauses.
The answer is No and Yes. A noun may the subject of a verb, or it may be the object of a verb or a preposition. For example, in the sentence "The person wrote this answer on a computer keyboard," the noun person is the subject,the noun answer is the object of the verb wrote, and the noun keyboard is the object of the preposition on.The subject may be some ideas.-------It could be if there is another noun in the sentence than they is not the subject JESUS LOVES YOU!!!!!!
It can be. It can also be a noun. It can be. "I want to hunt deer." In that sentence it is a verb. "I want to go on a hunt." In that sentence, it is a noun.
smothered verb
Herb is a noun not a verb.
Always is an adverb.
In the sentence, "he has always thought about his future" the verb phrase is "has always thought".
Sentence pattern: noun+ linking verb+noun