1. mary brush her hair.
2. ilove u tasbee .tamlima
they'll is a contraction containing "they" and "will"...they is a pronoun and will is a verb
A group of related words containing a subject and verb is a sentence.
There is no simple continuous tense past or present.Present simple tense has only one verb. eg I talk to the dog.Present continuous tense has be verb + present participle eg I am talking to the dog.Here is a paragraph using present simple:My name is Joe. I come from Ekatahuna. I am married. We liveon a farm and have lots of cows and sheep. My wife works at the local high school but I spend all my day on the farm. I enjoy farm work. - verbs in bold.We don't usually write using one tense but here is a paragraph in present continuous:My family are all staying at the beach house. My brother Bob is taking his sons fishing. My wife and Bob's wife are sitting on the deck having a cup of tea. I am reading the news paper. The sun is shining.
Racist is not a verb. Only verbs show tense
A group of words containing a subject and a verb is called a sentence. It is a complete thought that expresses an idea or action.
Keeping the verb tense consistent within a paragraph helps maintain clarity and readability for the reader. Switching verb tenses within a paragraph can create confusion and disrupt the flow of ideas. Consistent verb tense also helps to ensure that the timeline of events or actions is clearly communicated.
The second form of the verb "show" is "showed".
Yes. "Could show" is a verb phrase, even when another word appears inside it. This word order is commonly used only in questions; the corresponding statement form would be "Your dad could show us the video of the game".
No, it is not. It is a contraction of "they have" containing a pronoun and a linking verb.
Show can be a verb or noun. As a verb, "He will show us how to do it." As a noun, "We went to the show."
Yes, the word 'show' is both a noun (show, shows) and a verb (show, shows, showing, show, shown, showed).Examples:This is my favorite TV show. (noun)I will show you how to do it. (verb)
The sentence, 'I show you a toad.' is only missing an auxiliary verb (helper verb) to clarify the main verb 'show'. Examples:I will show you a toad. (...if you want me to.)I can show you a toad. (...because I have one in my pocket.)I may show you a toad. (...if I can find one.)I want to show you a toad. (...but I can't find one.)I was going to show you a toad. (...but you don't like getting your shoes wet.)I won't show you a toad. (...because you find them creepy.)An auxiliary verb helps the person you're talking to put your statement into context.