"Had become" is a verb phrase where "had" is an auxiliary (helping) verb and "become" is the main verb. The auxiliary verb "had" indicates the past perfect tense.
will become, shall become, (am/are/is) going to become,
verb
Become isa verb.The forms are:base verb = becomepast = becamepast participle = becomepresent participle = becoming
Yes, become is a verb (become, becomes, becoming, became).
become is an irregular verb.
'Becoming' is the present participle of 'become'.
"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 term "can become" is a verb. It would normally be followed by an adjective as it acts as a linking verb.
The simple past form of the verb "become" is "became".
"Became" is the irregular form of the verb "become" in the past tense.
Since the verb become has to do with a state of existence, it can be described as an existential verb.