go is the verb and among is the adverb
Only verbs have past participles. The main verb in the sentence is go and the past participle of go is gone.Do is also a verb and the past participle of do is done. But do is not the main verb in this sentence it is an auxiliary verb.
The verb on the sentence: I went for a run - is "went" which is the past of go.
Only verbs have past participles. The main verb in the sentence is go and the past participle of go is gone.Do is also a verb and the past participle of do is done. But do is not the main verb in this sentence it is an auxiliary verb.
the answer is might go, as a verb can't never contain NOT or n't as didn't or couldn't. So you remove it and whats left is your verb
"not" is the adverb in that sentence. It modifies the verb "go".
No, the correct sentence should be, "You will go to school today." The verb "go" should be used in its base form after the modal verb "will."
yes, it has a subject- "you", and a verb- "can go"
"Let's go" is an imperative sentence, which is a type of sentence that gives a command or request. In this context, "let's" is a contraction of "let us" and serves as the subject of the sentence, while "go" is the verb.
The single word 'Go' can only be considered a sentence when followed by punctuation characters that end a sentence (exclamation marks, question marks, period).Example : "Go!" (this is a single-word imperative form with the subject you understood)
Sure! Here is a sentence using the phrasal verb 'go about': "We need to decide how we are going to go about organizing the event."
A verb phrase consists of a main verb and any auxiliary (helping) verbs or other elements that complete the verb's meaning. Look for the main verb in a sentence, and then check for any auxiliary verbs or other words that modify or support the main verb to form a complete verb phrase.
To go