Actually, "anyone" is a pronoun used to refer to any person at all, while a verb is a word that expresses an action or a state of being.
Example: Worrying never does anyone any good.
Did - auxiliary verb anyone - pronoun throw - verb the - article ball - noun
Career can be a verb. As a verb it means to run, rush at full speed.He careered into the supermarket not stopping for anyone.
Help is not anyone. Help is a verb that means that you assist someone.
The correct form is "Does anyone have a pen?" as "anyone" is singular and takes "does" as the verb.
Some examples of indefinite pronouns that do not agree with the verb in number are "everyone" (singular pronoun) and "they" (plural verb). For instance, the sentence "Everyone were present at the meeting" should be corrected to "Everyone was present at the meeting."
The word 'anyone' is an indefinite pronoun, a word that takes the place of a noun for an unknown or unnamed person of an unspecified group. Example:We have not met anyone yet.
Yes, "stolen" is the past participle of the verb "steal." Example: "He had stolen the money before anyone noticed."
An intransitive verb does not require a direct object to complete its meaning, while a transitive verb does require a direct object to make sense. For example, "She sleeps" (intransitive) vs. "She eats an apple" (transitive).
"Do not subject anyone to ridicule." is a complete sentence.The sentence is made up of:you = the inferred subject of the sentence, a personal pronoun taking the place of the noun (name) of the person spoken to (second person);do subject = the verb;not = an adverb modifying the verb;anyone = direct object of the verb, an indefinite pronoun, a word taking the place of a noun for any unknown/unnamed person;to = a preposition relating the noun 'ridicule' to the verb 'subject';ridicule = a noun, the object of the preposition (the term 'to ridicule' is a prepositional phrase)
It is neither. It is an adverb, and will modify a verb, adjective or adverb.