Almost
The verb in the sentence is "is finished." This is a form of the verb "to finish," indicating the state of completion of the worksheet.
Yes, a sentence can contain both past tense and future tense verbs. For example, "She will have finished the project by the deadline." In this sentence, "will have finished" is future tense and "by the deadline" indicates a future event from the perspective of the past tense "finished."
Yes, you can end a sentence with the word "have" if it is part of a verb phrase, such as "I should have finished my homework."
The verb in the sentence "How are they different" is "are."
The verb is the action word in a sentence that describes what the subject is doing.
'Needs' would be the verb in this sentence.
Sally had finished her homework. (helping verb had, past tense of have)
The word 'almost' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.The adverb can modify a verb that has a plural noun as the subject or a verb that has a plural noun as an object:The cookies are almost ready. (subject of the sentence)The officer almost missed the suspects. (direct object)The adverb can modify an adjective that describes a plural noun: His workbench was littered with almost finished projects.They sell almost new items.The adverb can modify another adverb in a sentence that has a plural noun as the subject or a verb that has a plural noun as an object: The kids love almost every animated movie.My parents almost never go out.
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "had finished its performance".The subject is the noun phrase "The San Francisco ballet".
The auxiliary verb in the sentence is incorrect.The verb "were finished" should be "was finished" because the subject noun "concerto" is singular.
finished is the answer its a simple predicate.
2. paint and very finished is a verb. very and efficiently are adverbs.
Yes it is, unless the person who finished the project is named "Finally". Your sentence needs a subject like "I finally finished..." In some languages, like Spanish, the subject would be understood because the verb makes it clear. English requires the noun to accompany the verb.
The contraction "I'd" functions as a subject and verb (or auxiliary verb) in a sentence or a clause.Example sentences:I had finished my homework before going out. OR, I'd finished my homework before going out.I would like your chef's special. OR, I'd like your chef's special.
"has" as an auxiliary, it helps complete a sentence of present perfect tense with the following verb togegher .the verb here is "past participle"eg: she has been to china.He has finished his paper.if there is "has not " it means negative meaning of a sentence of present perfect tense.eg:she has not been to china.H e has not finished his paper.so "has not' should be followed by "past participle".
No, it's active. The passive voice must have the verb 'to be' in the correct tense plus the past participle of the main verb. So you sentence would be: The projects will have been finished (by them) before then.
Yes, a sentence can contain both past tense and future tense verbs. For example, "She will have finished the project by the deadline." In this sentence, "will have finished" is future tense and "by the deadline" indicates a future event from the perspective of the past tense "finished."
A past simple sentence has one verb in the past tense: I walked to school. -- The verb walk is in the past tense = walked. Past simple is used to talk about something that happened in the past and is now finished.