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Yes, the word clearly is an adverb.An example sentence is: "he could see clearly now that he discovered how to turn on the windscreen wipers".
It depends on what tense you are writing in. The forms of come are:come -- base verb - They always come late.comes -- present third person singular - She never comes late.came -- past - Everybody came late yesterday.come -- past participle - You have come late too many times.coming -- present participle - They are comingearly now.
It is worth more than a one lump sum.
See the link to conditional statements. "Could have done" is the positive form of a past conditional.It is unfortunate that John was not given the assignment; he could have done it extremely well.The positive aspect of the verb is that John is capableof doing it. The negative form would be ...he couldn't have done it. The situation described happened in the past and is not in the present or future. The conditional aspect is reflected in the fact that he was either given the assignment, or he was not. In this case he was not. Even though we know now that John was not given the assignment, we express events conditionally to reflect the possibility as it existed in the past.
im not sure but if you think life is going good right now then now but when you get to the future tell your self which is better.
The verb is "is" because it is a linking verb.
The linking verb in that sentence is "seems".
They would need to be careful in their house, because the storm was now coming.
standard verb usage is when you have a conjunction sentence without a verb or a regular sentence without a verb for example "Johny on a rock" but the sentence was suppose to be like this "Johny sat on a rock" now see? hope it works out for you! :)
To more easily identify the parts of a question sentence, change the question into a statement: Can you help her cross the street? -> You can help her cross the street. Now you can more easily identify that the subject is 'you', the verb is 'can help', the object of the verb help is 'her'.
A subject verb is created when the act of doing something becomes the subject of a sentence. For example, although swimming is a verb, in the statement, "Swimming is fun," the act of swimming is now the subject of the sentence.
It can be, such as in this sentence "I want you to end this right now!" In this sentence, end acts as an action word and therefore serves as a verb
The verb is "are being ... grown". This is the present progressive passive tense form of the verb "grow".
The subject in a sentence is the person or thing performing the action, while the verb is the action that the subject is doing. Together, they form the basic structure of a sentence by indicating who or what is doing the action.
Me thinks not. Because a sentence must consist of at least a noun and a verb. The word "Go" is a sentence because "You is understood, ie; "You go." Now if one were to say "You are right" that would make more sense.
Shall = auxiliary verb we = pronoun light = verb the = definite article candles = noun (plural) now = adverb
i am going to bed now''i'' is the subject "am going"is the intransitive verbs