spring about..
geddit? you asked for spring so i said spring when you jump? forget it...
i also run and jump and eat and collect (does collect count) and oh yeah i text.
hopping,running,playing,jumping, and skipping,
Nouns don't describe, adjectives describe. Synonyms are words that have the same or similar meanings as a word. Some adjectives to describe the spring: warmer, wet, promising, sunny, seasonable. Some synonyms for the spring: beginning, season, greening, emergence.
Normal verbs, abstract verbs, posession verbs, emotion verbs and mixed verbs
Be verbs, present tense be verbs. I am He is/she is/it is
The two kinds of verbs are linking verbs and verbs.
Action Verbs and Helping Verbs
The action verb is 'training' or, including auxiliary verbs 'should have been training'.
Verb semantic classes are then constructed from verbs, modulo exceptions, which undergo a certain number of alternations. From this classification, a set of verb semantic classes is organized. We have, for example, the classes of verbs of putting, which include Put verbs, Funnel Verbs, Verbs of putting in a specified direction, Pour verbs, Coil verbs, etc. Other sets of classes include Verbs of removing, Verbs of Carrying and Sending, Verbs of Throwing, Hold and Keep verbs, Verbs of contact by impact, Image creation verbs, Verbs of creation and transformation, Verbs with predicative complements, Verbs of perception, Verbs of desire, Verbs of communication, Verbs of social interaction, etc. As can be noticed, these classes only partially overlap with the classification adopted in WordNet. This is not surprising since the classification criteria are very different.
normal verbs non continuous verbs (include abstract, possession and emotional verbs) mixed verbs There are divisions and sub divisions according to syntax. Finite verbs - transitive and intransitive verbs non finite verbs - infinitives, gerunds and participles helping verbs (auxiliaries) primary and modal
Being verbs are verbs of being such as is, am, being, been, was, were, and can
I am not sure what you mean by 'special verbs'. You need to give examples or re ask your question. There are many kinds of verbs; be verbs, action verbs, state verbs, present participles, past participles, auxiliary verbs, etc The term 'special verbs' is not usually found in grammar books
The three kinds of verbs are action verbs, linking verbs, and helping verbs. Action verbs show physical or mental action. Linking verbs connect the subject to a description. Helping verbs work with the main verb to express tense or to add emphasis.