The noun parent can be used as a verb form; for example:
If you parent these orphaned ducklings, they will believe that you are their mother.
Could is the past form of can. (Sometimes was/were able to is used instead of could.)
Yes it is, or sometimes a verbal (participles) because it sometimes it appears in the form of a verb but acts as an adjective.
When a helping verb is used with the _______, the progressive form of the verb is created
When a helping verb is used with the _______, the progressive form of the verb is created
"Do" is most often a main verb that can be either transitive or intransitive. "Do" is also used as an auxiliary verb to form what is sometimes called an "emphatic" tense, as in, "How Fidel Castro does go on in his speeches!" but is also used as a compound form for asking questions, such as "Do you plan to go to the fair?"
'Were' is a linking verb, as it cannot modify a noun.
Yes. 'Pitching' is a gerund in this sentence. It's a verb form that's being used as a noun. 'Pitching' is the subject of the verb 'is.'
Exciting *is* sometimes an adjective (e.g. an exciting adventure). Another form of the verb used as an adjective is "excited."
No, the word 'is' is a verb, a form of the verb 'to be.' It cannot be used as a conjunction.
No, it's a verb form, which can be used as an adjective or a noun (gerund).
The word anxious is an adjective, a word that describes a noun, such as an anxious parent. The adverb form is anxiously; the noun form is anxiousness. There is no verb form.
Parent is a noun and a verb. Noun: She is a parent. Verb: She must parent her children now.