A word 'connected' to a verb could be a helping (auxiliary) verb, an adverb, a direct or an indirect object of the verb.
You may be looking for the word predicate. The predicate is the verb and all the words that follow the verb that are related to that verb. The simple predicate is the verb; the complete predicate is the verb and the related words that follow it. A sentence may have more than one simple predicate or complete predicate.
the verb compete is connected with the word competition.
The verb 'was' is a helping verb. It belongs with other forms of the verb 'be'.
When two simple singular subjects are connected by the word "or," the verb should agree with the subject that is closest to it.
no noun is a person place or thing , call is an verb. a verb is an action word.
Yes. Any word with the ending '-ing' is a verb.
The word calling is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb call.
Does is always a verb.When does is next to have you can call it an auxiliary verb or helping verb.
The word 'call' may function as both a verb and a noun in English.Examples- "The woman called her brother-in-law." - verb (past)- "You've got a call, Betty." - noun- "I really want to call him now." - verb- "He took the call." - noun
A verb is an action or doing word. There is no verb format for the word "convenience". The adjective of convenience is "convenient".
The word who've is a contraction, a combined form of the pronoun who and the verb (or auxiliary verb) have; a short form for 'who have'.Example:First we call those applicants who have had some experience.Or:First we call those applicants who've had some experience.
The word "does" is a verb or an auxiliary verb (or a "helping" verb).The verb "does" is the third person, present, singular of "do".Examples:My sister does the laundry. (verb)My sister does call every day. (auxiliary verb)We do chat a lot. (auxiliary verb)
Yes, "connected" can be a verb. It is the past tense and past participle form of the verb "connect." For example, "I connected the computer to the internet."