Yes it is the third person singular form of work. It is used with he/she/it or a singular noun subject. eg
He works at the bookshop.
The man next door works at the books shop. -- man is a singular noun.
Works can also be a noun.
the answer is "works". 'slowly' and 'steadily' are adverbs that describes the word 'works'
Yes, the word works. The word is an action performed by the subject Mary. Mary works every day
Verb. I hope this works for u
The word written is a verb. It is the past participle of the verb write. It can also be used as an adjective, as in "written works".
No, the verb "works" an action verb.A linking verb is a verb that functions as an equal sign, the subject is or becomes the object. Examples:He is the owner of the gas station. (he = owner)He became a mechanic in his teens. (he = mechanic)
Yes, I guess it is. It works if you think about it. A verb is a doing word soo:She was running:I am running:She was occupied:I am occupiedHope I helped ;)
The word 'work' is both a noun (work, works) and a verb (work, works, working, worked).The word 'hard' is an adjective used to describe the noun 'work'.The word 'school' is both a noun (school, schools) and a verb (school, schools, schooling, schooled).
The word 'apprentice' is both a noun and a verb. The noun 'apprentice' is a word for someone who works at a job in order to learn a skill, a word for a person. The verb 'apprentice' is to employ someone to train in a skilled job, or to work for the purpose of training in a skilled job.
The word "postman" is a person who works for the postal service. The postal service delivers letters that people have posted with due postage paid. Therefore the verb is the verb to "post" as in "post a letter".
The subject of the sentence: "The new teacher works very hard." is "teacher". Firstly identify the verb. The verb is "works". Ask who or what "works"? The answer is "teacher". the word "new" is an adjective. the words "hard" and "very" are both adverbs. "hard" aids our understanding of "works" and "very" aids our understanding of "hard".
Regarding the root word 'work' as a verb rather than a noun, the word 'works' is the present tense form. The word 'worked' is the past tense and means to have already worked. Ex. He works on his project regularly. He worked on his project yesterday during school.
the word were is a LINKING VERB.