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yes
It is a verb and a noun. Broom can also be a adjective when you use it in metaphors, similes, and sayings.
The object is still in the same position in the sentence when the verb is missing / implied it is the thing that 'receives' the action:eg.On the road a company of soldiers. (verb implied)verb stood. On the road stood a company of soldiers. object company of soldiers.In the gardens vegetables rotting and wasted.verb lay. In the gardens lay vegetables rotting and wasted. object vegetablesWhen the verb is implied you can basically use any verb that works.On the road rested a company of soldiers.
Implied
Use is a verb so it usually comes after a subject however in an imperative sentence the verb comes first (there is no subject - the subject is implied)Use your head!
Implied
similes and metaphors.
a verb. He implies there may be a test next week. "He" is the subject "implies" is the verb
The object is still in the same position in the sentence but the verb is missing / implied:eg.On the road a company of soldiers.verb stood. On the road stood a company of soldiers. object company of soldiers.In the gardens vegetables rotting and wasted.verb lay. In the gardens vegetables lay rotting and wasted. object vegetablesWhen the verb is implied you can basically use any verb that works.On the road rested a company of soldiers.
No. Metaphors are implied comparisons they don't use like or as (that's a simile). He thundered around the house. Your sentence is not comparing anything.
When children fail to use a noun, they may be using a pronoun.Example: I like that. He wants it.They may be using an implied subject. An imperative sentence can be a verb only.Example: Run! Run!The implied subject is the noun for the person spoken to: Run! Jack, run!
A sentence must have a minimum of a subject (which can be a noun or a pronoun) and a verb; and a sentence must express a complete thought. Examples:I ran. (the subject is the pronoun 'I', the verbis 'ran')Minnie ran home. (the subject is the noun 'Minnie', the verb is 'ran')The dog ran after the cyclist. (the subject is the noun 'dog', the verb is 'ran')We love strawberries. (the subject is the pronoun 'we', the verb is 'love')There are some sentences that are a single word. An imperative sentence can consist of just the verb, the subject is implied. Examples:Stop! (the implied subject is the pronoun 'you', the verb is 'stop')Come here. (the implied subject is the pronoun 'you', the verb is 'come')