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Pretty sure that's an action verb
"Turned" in the given sentence is a verb in its past tense. In this instance, "turned" is being used as a synonym for "became", and "rancid" is an "objective complement" of the "predicate adjective" type.
No, yellow is a color, and may be a noun, adjective, or verb. In the form "turned yellow" the verb "turn" is acting as a linking verb (became).
You can put the word revising in a sentence like this :My cousin was revising her essay before she turned it in.
I turned on the garden hose and watered my flowers.
Turned can be either an action verb OR a linking verb, depending on its function in the sentence. Examples:ACTION VERB: The car turned the corner. (Corner is a direct object receiving the action of transitive verb turned.)LINKING VERB: The night wind turned cold. (Turned links wind to cold, a predicate adjective describing wind.)The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object of the verb is a different form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister); or the subject becomes the object (...wind turned cold. wind->cold).
When the cocker spaniel suddenly realized he was charging up on a rather large german shepherd, he turned sharp around.
you are not straight if you get turned on by men (and you are a man), by definition
he suddenly turned up (to appear, emarge)
Pretty sure that's an action verb
No, move is not a linking verb. With a linking verb, the subject is (=) the object or becomes (->) the object. In the sentence, 'We can move the furniture.', we are not and we don't become the furniture.Linking verb examples:Michael is my brother. (Michael = brother)The day got too hot to work. (day -> hot)Andrea was lonely when she went to the new school. (Andrea = lonely)The leaves turned gold and red. (leaves -> gold and red)
Hitherto means "until this or that time." Until the industrial revolution smog was hitherto unknown. The weather, which had hitherto been sunny and warm, suddenly turned cold.
Turned is a verb in that sentence.
His amiable disposition suddenly turned diabolically sour.
yes
Finish this sentence: her paws turned to…
(The word can mean turned to stone, or metaphorically, shocked into immobility.)The petrified remains of sea animals are found in fossil.When the ghost suddenly appeared, he was petrified.