saved
'saved' is a verb so you think about a circumstance in which this verb could be used then write this down.
Davy is the subject. It's who performed the action of the verb.
I/you/we/they have saved. He/she/it has saved.
That is not a sentence, it has no verb. 'A wretched tribulation of torment' is a noun phrase that can be used in a sentence as the subject, the object of the verb, or the object of a preposition; for example:subject: A wretched tribulation of torment blew in with the monsoon.object of the verb: He suffered a wretched tribulation of torment.object of the preposition: They saved the village from a wretched tribulation of torment.
The verb in the sentence "How are they different" is "are."
This is not a question.The verb in this sentence is saved it is a past tense verb and there is only one verb so the sentence is past simple.A past simple question could be:Did the airplane pilot save everyone aboard the aircraft?Notice in a past simple question using the word did(which is the past of do) did shows us the question is past. The main verb save is in the base form of the verb not the past form.
Yes.
Is is the verb in your sentence.
The verb in that sentence is "are".
Were is the verb in that sentence.
'Needs' would be the verb in this sentence.
Depending on the context, sentence is already a verb For example, "to sentence someone" is an action and therefore a verb.