was
No, it is a sentence. The verb is the word "is."
"Was" is the verb in the sentence "The book was really interesting." It is the past tense form of the linking verb "to be," showing that the book possessed the quality of being interesting at a specific point in the past.
The parts of the speech for the sentence, 'Can a person really be hypnotized?' are more easily seen if, just for the purpose of recognizing the parts, you change it around to, 'A person can really be hypnotized.': person is the subject can be is the verb really is the adverb (modifying the verb) hypnotized is the object
"Amiss" is an adverb. It describes how the verb/action in the sentence was performed. It should be used after the verb. Example: "I was really just wandering amiss." Here, 'wandering' is the verb and amiss describes how I was wondering.
The word "really" isn't a verb at all....it's an adverb.
I don't really know what your question is. However, I think that it is asking this: "Do you do your homework?" Is that a sentence, and why or why not? Yes, that is a sentence. In order to be a sentence, it needs to have two things: a subject and a verb. A verb is an action. In this case, the second "do" is the verb: I do, you do, they do. The subject is whatever is performing the action. In this case, "you" is the subject. So it has a subject and a verb. Hope I helped!
The verb in the sentence "How are they different" is "are."
The verb tense in the sentence "She really wants a snowy winter" is present simple. This tense is used to express a current desire or state of being. The verb "wants" indicates an ongoing action or preference that is relevant in the present moment.
If you pour disinfectant on an open wound it can really smart.
I really hate hot humid weather.
Is is the verb in your sentence.
a verb that causes the subject to perform the action.