The present participle and the past participle of a verb can be an adjective; for example:
Present Participle: Jim goes to fencing class.
Past participle: The house has a fenced yard.
Present participle: We lay out in the baking sun.
Past participle: We made the Sandwiches from freshly baked bread.
The verb for strong is strengthen.Explanation:If you change strong into a noun (strength) you can then change it into a verb. (strengthen)
A noun that completes the action of a verb is the object of the sentence or phrase.
Yes, it is. It means functioning, capable of performing an action or operation.
How old was Martin when he graduated college? (Martin was how old when he graduated college?)how - adverb, modifies the adjective 'old';old - adjective, functioning as a predicate adjective;was - linking verb;Martin - proper noun, subject of the sentence;when - conjunction;he - personal pronoun, subject of the second part of the compound sentence;graduated - verb;college - noun, direct object of the verb 'graduated'.
The verb in the sentence is: isThe verb 'is' is functioning as a linking verb, the object of the verb restates the subject (whiz = he).
It is a verb
The verb is were.The verb 'were' is a form of the verb 'to be'.The verb 'were' is functioning as a linking verb in this sentence. The object of the verb (suspicious) restates the subject (Trojans).A noun or an adjective that follows a linking verb is called a subject complement.An adjective functioning as a subject complement is called a predicate adjective. The word 'suspicious' is a predicate adjective.
Yes, it is an adjective, and means "not functional, not working." The adjective "broken" is functioning as a predicate adjective (a form of subject complement), an adjective that follows a linking verb that restates the subject of the sentence (phone = broken).
No, in the sentence, "I'm beautiful." there are no nouns.The parts of speech are of the sentence are:I'm, a contraction for "I am", the subject pronoun and the verb of the sentence.beautiful, an adjective, functioning as a subject complement (predicate adjective) following the linking verb "am" (I = beautiful).
The verb for strong is strengthen.Explanation:If you change strong into a noun (strength) you can then change it into a verb. (strengthen)
A noun that completes the action of a verb is the object of the sentence or phrase.
The compound word 'stay-at-home' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. In a sentence like: My dad is a stay-at-home. The adjective is functioning as a subject complement (an adjective following a linking verb which restates, describes, the subject of the sentence).
The compound word 'stay-at-home' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. In a sentence like: My dad is a stay-at-home. The adjective is functioning as a subject complement (an adjective following a linking verb which restates, describes, the subject of the sentence).
No, the word 'bored' in that sentence is an adjective.The adjective 'bored' is functioning as a predicate adjective (a type of subject complement), an adjective following a linking verb that renames or restates the subject (he = bored).
Yes, "everlasting" can function as a participle when it is used as an adjective in a verb phrase. For example, in the sentence "The sunset was everlasting," "everlasting" is functioning as a participle modifying the noun "sunset."
The verb in the sentence is: isThe verb 'is' is functioning as a linking verb, the object of the verb restates the subject (whiz = he).
The verb in the sentence is: can walk.The word 'can' is functioning as an auxiliary verb (helper verb) that modifies the main verb 'walk' as 'able to'.