This sentence has two verbs - a verb phrase.
had and scored.
Had
is the past tense of have/has.
Scored
is the past participle of score.
Had scored
is a past perfect verb phrase.
Past tense. "Scored" is the past tense of the verb "score".
Win can either be a verb or a noun depending on its usage: Verb: "I won the game!" or "They were winning by three points." Noun: "To our surprise, the underdog team scored a win!"
No. Winning is the present participle of the verb (to win) and can be a verb form, adjective, or noun (gerund). There is an adverb 'winningly' but it has a different connotation.An adverb is a descriptive word that modifies a verb. 'Winning' does not modify a verb (eg the sentence "Dave winning glanced at Karen, who melted" does not make sense, because 'winning' isn't an adverb), and therefore is not an adverb. In a sentence that uses 'winning': "Dave gave Karen a winning glance," 'winning' is modifying 'glance,' a noun, not 'gave,' the verb. Therefore, one may conclude that 'winning' is an adjective, not an adverb.
Win can either be a verb or a noun depending on its usage: Verb: "I won the game!" or "They were winning by three points." Noun: "To our surprise, the underdog team scored a win!"
There is no linking verb in that sentence. The only verb, loves, is a transitive verb. The direct object of the transitive verb is "driving".
"John acknowledged winning the money."The nouns in the sentence are:John; proper noun, subject of the sentencewinning; gerund, direct object of the verb 'acknowledged'money; common noun, indirect object of the verb 'acknowledged'
The first part of the sentence, "winning the race", is a gerund phrase, and "winning" is the gerund. "Winning the race demanded speed and endurance" is an entire sentence, because it contains a subject (the gerund phrase) and a verb (demanded).
No, it is not an adverb. Score is a noun, or verb. It is also an archaic term for "twenty."
recorded
The verb in the sentence "How are they different" is "are."
This sentence can be diagrammed as follows: Subject (Ellen) - Verb (told) - Direct Object (the story) - Indirect Object (David).
The verb is the action word in a sentence that describes what the subject is doing.
The verb in that sentence is "are".