You can tell if a verb is singular or plural by looking at the subject of the sentence. If the subject is singular (e.g., "he," "she," "it"), the verb should also be singular (e.g., "runs," "sings"). If the subject is plural (e.g., "they," "we," "the dogs"), the verb should be plural (e.g., "run," "sing").
"He" is the subject, and "was" is the verb.
The subject is he, and the verb is was.
The verb is the action word in a sentence that describes what the subject is doing. Other words that are about the subject include adjectives that describe the subject, adverbs that modify the verb, and articles that indicate the specificity of the subject.
Yes, "tell" is a verb. The past tense of "tell" is "told."
No. An adjective is more likely to do that. A verb is likely to tell you what the subject is doing (so, I suppose in a sense it's telling you something about the subject - but if I'd said 'yes' to your question you might have got the wrong idea).
"I" is the subject in that sentence. The subject is who is performing the action of the verb.
The statement "He or she could tell you" has a compound subject - there are two nouns preceding the verb. A compound predicate would be "He could tell you about airplanes or about trains."
The subject is who or what a sentence is about; the sentence should describe or tell something about the subject. The subject always needs a verb, showing what is happening in the sentence.
The word told is an action verb, the past tense of the verb to tell, the act of telling.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 (My feet got wet. feet->wet).
subject conducting is a verb
"He" is the subject, and "was" is the verb.
SV = Subject Verb (I like cake.)SSV = Subject, Subject, Verb (She and I like cake.)SVV = Subject, Verb, Verb (I like cake and hate yams.)SSVV = Subject, Subject, Verb, Verb (She and I like cake and hate yams.)
Yes, "tell" is a verb. It is used to communicate something to someone by speaking, writing, or conveying information in some way.
The verb is the action word in a sentence that describes what the subject is doing. Other words that are about the subject include adjectives that describe the subject, adverbs that modify the verb, and articles that indicate the specificity of the subject.
"They" is a pronoun that is used as a subject in a sentence. It is not a verb.
The sentence in which the verb is a linking verb uses the verb to connect the subject of the verb to more information about the subject. The linking verb will not express an action.