There are:
two main verbs - caught and bringing
one auxiliary verb - has
one be verb - is
The word 'fish' is both a noun and a verb.The noun 'fish' is a word for a type of water dwelling animal and a type of food we eat.The verb 'fish' is to attempt to catch this type of water dwelling animal.I once caught a fish in this lake. (noun)I like to fish in this lake. (verb)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence, for example:I caught a fish today and brought it home to show my dad. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'fish' in the second part of the sentence)An adjective is a word that describes a noun, for example: I caught a big fish today. (the adjective 'big' describes the noun 'fish')
Thousands - noun of - preposition years - noun ago - adverb fish - noun were - verb (auxiliary) caught - verb (past participle) in - preposition nets - noun and - conjunction traps - noun
"A fish is usually caught by baiting a hook and placing that into the water, thus catching the fish by the mouth when it bites down on the bait." is the literal meaning. Figuratively, it means that a person/liar/criminal is caught by his words or what he says.
There is not a linking verb in the sentence "Thousands of years ago, fish were caught in nets and traps."A linking verb is one that connects the subject to more information about the subject (subject complement). Example: They were happy when the plane landed after a turbulent flight. Were is the linking verb connecting the subject, they, to the subject compliment, happy.An auxiliary verb (helping verb) helps another verb complete the verb phrase. In the predicate were caught, were is an auxiliary verb.
The plural form 'fishes' is used for the creatures, but many people do use the singular 'fish' as the singular (I caught a fish.), and the plural (I caught three fish.). The plural form, 'I caught three fishes.' is a correct use. Apparently, most people find the 'singular only' use is just fine.The uncountable (mass) noun 'fish' is the word for the food, a substance, with no plural form. Both fish and fishes are plurals to fish.
"were caught" is the verb.
hardly
The word 'and' is a conjunction, a word that connects words, sentences, phrases, or clauses.The conjunction 'and' connects the compound objects of the preposition 'in'.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: Fish were caught in nets and traps. Theywere cooked on a campfire. (the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'fish' in the second sentence)
The nouns are: thousands, years, fish, nets, traps.
And is a conjunction.
A noun is a naming word. The nouns in the sentence are therefore men, fish, gulf and Mexico.
Pallas's Fish Eagle was created in 1771.
The Bald Eagle eats fish. And also other prey
maybe they look like a fish and an eagle
Steller's sea eagle, white tailed eagle, African fish eagle, Pallas fish eagle, Sanford's sea eagle. All are in the genus Haliaeetus.
an eagle
Any fish-eating eagle could be simply known as a piscivorous eagle. This just means "fish eating eagle"