No, the word 'yet' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb and a conjunction, a word that joins two parts of a sentence. Example uses:
Adverb: The package hasn't arrived yet.
Conjunction: He wanted it yet he let his sister have it.
Yes the verb was in the sentence it is arrived, the past tense of arrive
has arrived
The correct phrase is "have not yet," where "yet" is placed after the verb "have" to indicate that something has not happened up to the present moment.
The parts of speech in the given sentence are: proper noun (Jeb), verb (like), noun (cars), conjunction (but), verb (cant drive), adverb (yet).
The senstance should read "Has he woken up yet?" The verb takes the past tense. It can also be "Has he awakened?"
The verb is has arrived.
(A+) the sentence is (or should be) "Has my brother arrived yet?" the verb phrase is "has arrived"
No. You cannot say for example: I five you or have you fived yet. So five is not a verb
The action verb is "ran" !
Ran.Ran is the past tense of the verb run.
Yes, "understands" is a verb.
Ran is the action verb of this sentence.
Yes the verb was in the sentence it is arrived, the past tense of arrive
has arrived
The verb of catastrophe is catastrophise. As in the action to "catastrophise something". As of 2013 it is a new word, so it does not yet appear in all dictionaries.
No, the word 'yet' is an adverb and a conjunction.Examples:They haven't yet finished the street repair. (modifies the verb 'haven't finished')The painting was strange yet appealing. (connects additional information to the initial statement)
the adverb in the sentence is "fairness". It describes how the action is being performed, which is listening or hearing.