The verb in the clause is becomes.
Note: the verb must be the third person singular (land is singular) present tense, ending with an 's'.
The verb of dirt is dirty. Used in the context of "to dirty something".
First of all, it's affected, not effected. Effect is a noun, not a verb. Erosion shapes the land and helps determine its topography.
It means -noun 1. a place where a sea, river, or other body of water is shallow. 2. a sandbank or sand bar in the bed of a body of water, esp. one that is exposed above the surface of the water at low tide.-adjective 3. of little depth, as water; shallow.-verb (used without object) 4. to become shallow or more shallow.-verb (used with object) 5. to cause to become shallow. 6. Nautical. to sail so as to lessen the depth of (the water under a vessel). You can now probably figure out how to put it into a sentence. Thank you to dictionary.com!
No, quake is predominantly a verb. It's also used as a noun as a shortened version of an earthquake.
Yes, the word soil is a noun, a word for a substance, a word for a thing. The word soil is also a verb (soil, soils, soiling, soiled), to become or make dirty.
The noun 'desert' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a dry, barren area of land, a word for a place. The word 'desert' is also a verb and an adjective.
The verb "land" is transitive when it is used with a direct object. For example, in the sentence "She landed the plane," "plane" is the direct object of the verb "land." However, "land" can also be used as an intransitive verb when it does not take a direct object. For example, in the sentence "The plane landed," there is no direct object.
He will become a career criminal if he stays in the gang.
If used in the context of "to become familiar of", then familiar is already a verb. Another verb would be "familiarise". As in "to familiarise yourself in something".
"To Land" is considered a verb because it is an action. To tell someone to "Land" is a command, and not a verb. To be in the bird's nest of a ship and say "Land!" is to state a noun.
The word free can be either a verb or an adjective. For an example of the verb usage, since I disapprove of slavery, I wish to free the slaves.
verb
"Become" is a linking verb when it is used to connect the subject of a sentence with a subject complement that describes or renames it. It is not an action verb like "run" or "eat," which show physical actions.
No. The word becoming is a verb form, or gerund (noun), that can also be used as an adjective (meaning attractive). The adverb form would be "becomingly."
Has become. The 3rd person singular (he, she, it) uses 'has become.' The other persons of the conjugation use 'have become.' He has become class president. She has become homecoming princess. It has become time to go. 'Become' is the correct participial form of the verb; is become, has become, had become, might have become, will become, etc. 'Became' is the simple past tense conjugation of the verb, and is never used as the participle.
"Chap" can be used as a verb, meaning to crack or become roughened, typically referring to skin.
:Land of the living is the subject. Are is the verb.