Yes.
The verb is "be", as in "is/am/are" and the past "was/were".
I (be) am pretty. Am(be) I pretty? Past form - Was I pretty?
He/she (be) is pretty. Is (be) he/she pretty? Past form - Was he/she pretty?
We/you/they (be) are pretty. Are (be) we/they/you pretty? Past form - Were we/you/they pretty?
One (singular) painting is an "it" so the past interrogative would be "Is the painting pretty?".
More than one is plural (paintings), so the past interrogative would be "Were the paintings pretty?".
The subject of the sentence is the interrogative pronoun 'which', the verb is 'is'.
No you can't, it is not possible. Does is the verb in questions starting with does. You can make questions starting with is:- Is this you car?
'Who is head usher?' is a sentence, an interrogative sentence, a question. Who = an interrogative pronoun and the subject of the sentence; takes the place of the noun that is the answer to the question. is = verb head = adjective; describes the noun usher usher = noun and the object of the sentence
The word what've is a contraction made up of two words, the interrogative pronoun "what" and the verb "have". The contraction acts as the subject and the verb (or auxiliary verb) of an interrogative sentence; for example:What've you heard about them? (What have you heard...)What've we got for lunch? (What have we got...)
interrogative :A sentence of inquiry that asks for a replyquery: verb, Pose a question
A linking verb is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence. An interrogative sentence is the only instance when a linking verb starts a sentence.Examples:Is Jack your brother? (Jack is brother)Was the movie good? (movie was good)
"Who" is the subject of the sentence, and "called" is the verb. The subject goes on a horizontal line and the verb goes on the same horizontal line after the subject. Draw a vertical line between the two, and you have a sentence diagram! http://www.english-grammar-revolution.com/interrogative-sentence.html This link has other interrogative sentences and diagrams of them. :)
An interrogative sentence is one that uses a question mark, and a compound verb is one that involves more than one word in an action. An example of a sentence using both of these would be, "Did you manage to proofread my screenplay last night, Mildred?"
Sure, feel free to provide the interrogative sentence that you would like me to change into the simple past form.
The word "are" is the verb in the sentence "The flowers are very pretty."."The", is an article"flowers", is a noun"are", is a verb"very", is an adjective modifying "flowers""pretty" is an adjective modifying "flowers"
Yes, the form "Have you tea?" is technically correct but not a good modern form. The use of to have is seen in the modern form "Do you have tea?" -- This is the interrogative form of "you do have tea" as opposed to "you have tea."In this case "to have" is the verb and "do" is the auxiliary verb form, although similar in use to the modal verbs such as can.
To change a declarative sentence to an interrogative sentence, you can usually do so by inverting the subject and auxiliary verb. For example, changing "She is going to the store" to an interrogative would become "Is she going to the store?" Additionally, you can also add a question word at the beginning of the sentence, such as "What," "Where," "Why," or "Who."