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A pig
will not
The two words "will build" comprise the verb in this sentence.
It can be. It can also be a noun. It can be. "I want to hunt deer." In that sentence it is a verb. "I want to go on a hunt." In that sentence, it is a noun.
The words, "the banana belonging to the chimp" is not a sentence, it's a sentence fragment, a noun clause (a group of words that contains a noun or pronoun and a verb but is an incomplete thought that can't stand on it's own).There is no possessive noun in the noun clause, "the banana belonging to the chimp".The possessive form is, "the chimp's banana", a noun phrase (any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun, without a verb, that can function in a sentence as a subject or an object).
The verb is 'feared' because it is used with an object
There is no verb phrase in the sentence; the main verb is 'is', there are no auxiliary verbs to form a verb phrase. Example of verb phrase:I would have thought that the rattle snake was the most feared animal in the west.
The verb phrase is has been. Has is a form of have and been is the past participle of be.This is a present perfect sentence. Present perfect is formed with -- have/has + past participle.eg have been, have sent, have given, have eaten, has taken, has broken, has lost
Has won is the verb phrase.
The verb phrase in the sentence is "are the cripple on the corner."
The verb phrase in this sentence is "were getting"
The verb is "play" and the verb phrase is "can play."
"Can override" is the verb phrase in that sentence.
might have gone
In the sentence "He has always thought about his future," the verb phrase is "has always thought." While "thought" is the verb, a verb phrase includes words that may affect the tense of the verb.
The verb phrase is will be.
The verb phrase is will be.