No, "wanted" is not a linking verb. It is a verb that shows an action or a desire, rather than connecting the subject to a subject complement.
The word wanted is an action verb. Wanted can be an indicative, subjunctive, or conditional verb by adding a linking word to it.
No. The verb to become is a linking verb, and the verb to be is a linking verb, but they are two separate verbs.
Has is a linking verb.
Was is a linking verb.
Was is a linking verb.
The verb to want is an action verb. The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object 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).
linking verb
"Did" is not a linking verb.
it is a linking verb
"It" is not a linking verb. "It" is a pronoun.
Linking verb
Linking verb.Were is the past tense plural be verb any form of be verb is a linking verb.