"Became" is the past tense of the verb "become," which means to come to be or to transition into a particular state or condition.
Became is a linking verb because there is no action
The simple past form of the verb "become" is "became".
"Became" is the irregular form of the verb "become" in the past tense.
its a linking verb( i am so proud i just figured that out ... i hope its right)
No, "became" is not a pronoun. It is the past tense form of the verb "become" and is used to describe a change or transformation.
The word 'became' is the past tense of the verb to become.The verb 'became' means has begun to be.Example: When my brother won the lottery he became very popular.Note: The verb 'became' is a linking verb, the object of the verb restates the subject (he = popular).
No. The verb to become is a linking verb, and the verb to be is a linking verb, but they are two separate verbs.
Became is a verb. He became quiet. Subject Verb Adverb
Yes, become is a verb (become, becomes, becoming, became).
Became is a linking verb because there is no action
became is a state verb. Left is the action verb.
became is not a noun? it is a verb.
became
The verb 'became' is the past and past participle form of the verb become. The verb became is always a linking verb.The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object of the verb is a different form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister); or the subject becomes the object (My feet got wet. feet->wet). For example:Matt became a dentist. (Matt = dentist)I never became a movie star. (I never = movie star)Forms of the verb to be and to seem are also always linking verbs.
verb
left became is a state verb impatient is an adjective angrily is an adverb
Yes , no