A verb for president is preside.
Presides, presiding and presided are other verbs, depending on the tense.
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No, "saw" is the past tense of see.
There is no linking verb in the sentence "The people elected him president in 1800." Elected is a regular verb.Linking verbs do not express an action and connect the subject to a subject complement. Example: Learning is fun. Isis a linking verb connecting the subject (learning) to the complement (fun).
The sentence is incorrect. The correct version is: 'To the disappointment of the crowd, neither the president nor any of his aides was able to attend the ceremony.' 'Neither' takes the singular form of the verb, not the plural, if the subjects are singular. 'The president' is singular, and 'any of his aides' is singular. However, if at least one of the subjects is plural, so is the verb: 'Neither my parents nor my cousins were able to come to my party.' 'Neither my parents nor my cousin were able to come to my party.' But: 'Neither of my parents was able to come to my party.'
"Impeach" is a verb. "Impeachment" is a noun.
"Is" is the verb in this sentence.
preside
"Is" is the linking verb in this sentence. All this means is that "is" is the verb and the type of verb is a linking verb.
The verb is "was". It's a past tense form of the verb "to be".
The nouns are: George Washington and President, proper nouns for the name of a person and the person's title.
The predicate noun (or predicate nominative) is the noun or a pronoun following a linking verb that restates or stands for the subject.The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a form of the subject, or the subject becomes the object.Examples:Mary was elected class president. (Mary->president)Mary is the new class president. (Mary=president)
Yes it is an action verb.
Yes, "elected" can act as a linking verb when it is used to connect the subject of a sentence to a subject complement that describes or renames the subject. For example, in the sentence "She was elected president," "elected" is serving as a linking verb linking "she" to the subject complement "president."
No, "saw" is the past tense of see.
qwek qwak ... add me sa ym abizhal13 :]] IMPROVED ANSWER : hmm..Barack Obama is the President of the United States of America. Barack Obama is the subject IS is the linking verb and PRESIDENT is the subjective complement like saying barack obama = president
There is no linking verb in the sentence "The people elected him president in 1800." Elected is a regular verb.Linking verbs do not express an action and connect the subject to a subject complement. Example: Learning is fun. Isis a linking verb connecting the subject (learning) to the complement (fun).
YES!Is = 3rd person,singular, present 'be' verb. Use is with he/she/it or singular noun phrase as subjectspresent simple - She is happy today, My brother iseighteen, It is my dog!Is is an axillary verb when followed by verb + ing.present continuous - He is working hard. Mr Smith is waiting.or followed by a past participle:The President is surrounded by people