Thought.
"has always thought" is the verb phrase in this sentence.
has always thought about his future
No, the sentence has no abstract nouns, it has no nouns at all. she = pronoun (subject of the sentence) thought = verb you = pronoun (subject of the dependent clause) should have left = verb earlier = adverb (modifies the verb 'left')
The noun 'thought' is a common noun, a singular, common, abstract noun. The word 'thought' is also a verb, the past tense of the verb 'to think'.
Was opening is the verb phrase.Open is a regular verb.
In the sentence, "he has always thought about his future" the verb phrase is "has always thought".
In the sentence "He has always thought about his future," the verb phrase is "has always thought." While "thought" is the verb, a verb phrase includes words that may affect the tense of the verb.
I think the verb is future always is definitely an adverb
In the sentence "He has always thought about his future," the verb phrase is "has always thought." While "thought" is the verb, a verb phrase includes words that may affect the tense of the verb.
always thought
has thought
has always thought about his future
There is no future tense verb in this sentence. The sentence is present simple (is).
The tense of the verb "clean" in the sentence is future tense, indicated by the auxiliary verb "will."
Simple future
The future tense follows this structure:Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Will" + Verb
The verb in the sentence is: will wiltThe main verb is 'wilt'.The modal auxiliary verb is 'will', which shows us the sentence is about the future.