Yes, because a verbal alone is not a predicate. Rarely, the sentence is an exclamation or interjection,
or has an understood verb or subject.
"Doggone road icing!"
"Raining hard today." (understood "it is")
"Never seen that before!" (understood "I have")
A verb form such as a participle that does not act as a verb in the sentence
He had very good verbal skills and aptitude. It is used for the logical ability of a person.
to stop a sentence
Square brackets are used inside regular parentheses, in a sentence.
A pronoun takes the place of a noun in a sentence and a gerund, a verbal noun, can be used for all of the functions of a noun as the subject of a sentence or clause and the object of a verb or a preposition.
Square brackets are used inside regular parentheses, in a sentence.
Verbal communication is very important. Children learn verbal communication very quickly. Their verbal communication had almost completely stopped, because their feud had got so bad.
He stood on a podium.It can be used as a regular noun.
Cinderella received much vituperation from her step sisters. i used it in a different tense, but it means verbal abuse (with language)
The name for the -ing verb form used as a noun is a gerund or verbal noun.
A subject can be used as a verb in a sentence by adding the appropriate conjugation for the subject acting as the verb. For example, in the sentence "The dog barks loudly," "dog" is the subject and "barks" is the verb.
The Columbian Exchange is still used today.