The verb in "you walked to the store" is walked.
Walked is a verb because it describes an action that you are performing.
Related verbs are walks, walk, and walking.
Walked.
The word "walked" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "walk."
She walked to the store yesterday.
"They walked" is a sentence. This is so because it contains a verb and a subject for that verb.
Walked is the verb in the sentence, "Damien and Gavin walked to school in the rain."
Walked is the verb and slowly is the adverb
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "slowly walked down the road".The subject is the pronoun "They".
A verb is an action verb if it is something that is happening, and that has some effect; for example, in the sentence "I walk to the store," walk is an action verb because the subject, I, is performing a task. In the sentence, "I am at the store," am is a being verb because it describes a state of being; the subject, I, IS as the store.
No.
Yes, "He" can be the complete subject of a sentence. For example, in the sentence "He is going home," "He" is the complete subject because it tells us who or what the sentence is about and is followed by the verb "is going."
brought is the action verb
You can use "walked" in a sentence like this: "She walked to the store to buy some groceries."
They name stuff when you say "I walked to the store." that sentence is an example of a past tense. When you say "I will walk to the store." that is an example of a future tense. When you say " I am walking to the store." is an example of a present tense.