"Told" is typically considered as a verb, but specifically, it is a past tense form of the verb "tell." It conveys the action of conveying information or a story to someone.
The verb in the sentence is "told". It is an action verb that shows what Mrs Walker did.
The voice of the verb "told" in the sentence is active, as the subject (Mrs. Walker) is performing the action (telling).
Yes, "has told" is the present perfect tense of the verb "to tell." It combines the auxiliary verb "has" with the past participle "told" to indicate an action that happened at an unspecified time before now.
The voice of the verb "told" in the sentence is active. Mrs. Walker is the subject performing the action of telling scary stories to her class.
"Sent" is an action verb. It shows an action, such as "she sent an email."
yes 'told' is the verb, or action in this sentence.
The word told is an action verb, the past tense of the verb to tell, the act of telling.The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object of the verb is a different form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister); or the subject becomes the object (My feet got wet. feet->wet).
It is an action verb.
began is an action verb, not a linking verb.
LIke so many answers to questions of this type: it depends. Action: "I told Alicia how much weight I had lost, she just laughed." Why action? Because it is an intransitive verb where there is no recipient of the action. "Saying": "I told Alicia how much weight I had lost. 'Won't the doughnut shop go out of business?" she laughed." Action: "She scoffed at my accomplishments." saying: She scoffed "Yeah, like that matters." The difference is in the presence of something said or, in this case, laughed.
"Sent" is an action verb. It shows an action, such as "she sent an email."
what follows a linking or action verb
It is an action verb.
action verb
Action verb
Action verb
An action verb