Yes. "Could show" is a verb phrase, even when another word appears inside it. This word order is commonly used only in questions; the corresponding statement form would be "Your dad could show us the video of the game".
What is the verb phrase in this sentence? "Could your dad show us the video of the game?
It is could show.
show is the verb
Which sentence is correctly punctuated?
show
Game- because it can't be ball because that is in an adverb phrase
Both; An internet video game!
I believe it was Red Dead Redemption for the Game of the Year. Hope this helped.
Tetris is the most-sold video game in the world with 143 million copies sold.
telroboxertetris
jenny was sitting beside the tree. show the verb in this sentence
jenny was sitting beside the tree. show the verb in this sentence
jenny was sitting beside the tree. show the verb in this sentence
This question makes no sense. Please rephrase.
The verb phrase in this sentence is "were getting"
The sentence would be, "This is Scott's video game."
From what I recall the first video game was Pong, but I could be wrong.
Zero Wing
I was interacting with the video game and i completed the level.
if you wanted to use my you could say eg: give me back my video game. if you wanted to use mine you could say eg: hey that's mine
'But' is a conjunction; it is used to link two sentences together. It can still be used at the start of a sentence, however. Here is an example:'He greatly desired a copy of a recently released video game. But, he could not afford it.'More commonly though, 'but' is used to make two sentences into one, forming a compound or compound-complex sentence. For example:'He greatly desired a copy of a recently released video game, but he could not afford it.'
You could copy a video game as long as its on a disk and if you have the right programs on your PC