No, because verbs consist of action verbs, linking verbs, and helping verbs; "You" is none of those so it can't be a modifying verb if it's not a verb at all. "You" is a nominative pronoun.
A verb. It is an adjective modifying the verb.
There are no adjectives and only one adverb (peacefully) in the sentence. It would have to be modifying the verb (slept).
The adverb usually follows the verb it is modifying: The shirt was made well. You played well today.
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 it is because have is a verb so haven't is a verb too
No, the word 'looks' is a verb, the word 'out' is an adverb modifying the verb.
The adverb in the sentence is out, modifying the verb rang (rang how, rang out).
It isn't a verb. It's an adjective."A sure thing." Sure is the adjective modifying the noun thing."I'm sure you are right." Sure is the adjective modifying I.
The word 'stooped' is a verb, the past tense of the verb to stoop.The word 'down' is an adverb, modifying the verb 'stooped'.
The word really is an adverb. Modifying a verb, It can mean actually. Modifying an adjective, it means very.
Modifying verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs. - Modifying verb: "The girl ran quickly." - Modifying adjective: "The cake tasted extremely delicious." - Modifying adverb: "Julia ran extremely quickly."
AdverbExample: She sings abnormally. (abnormally being the adverb, modifying sings)Example: Her singing is surprisingly abnormal. (surprisingly being the adverb, modifying abnormal, which is an adjective)adverbAn adverb usually modifies a verb, but can sometimes modify an adjective.