Simply is not a verb. It's an adverb.
A helping verb can work with the main verb to tell about an action. The helping verb always comes before the main verb.
The verb would be to differ.
Like is the main verb. The auxiliary verb is would. The verb phrase is would like.
A simple verb is only one word eg - run A compound verb is a verb that is made up of more than one word eg - stirfry
Present simple or simple present.This means there is one verb and it is in the base form eg run walk talk,eg:I walk to work. They walk to work. The poicemen walk to workexcept for subjects he / she / it and singular nouns then the form is verb + segshe walks to work. He walks to work. The polceman walks to work
A lexical verb is simply the main verb in a sentence.
A sentence simply had a verb? Oh boy!
The verb form of 'punishment' is simply to punish.Example: "He was punished for his misbehavior."
"Answer" is a regular verb. In the past tense, it becomes "answered" by simply adding "-ed" to the base form of the verb.
Simply, no, you can't use the word 'fact' as a VERB. You can use it as a noun.
If the verb is regular then you simply add -ed. If the verb is irregular then the past tense is a different word/form. There's no rule in forming it, you simply have to learn the list.
Simply no preposition :)
False
You simply put it in a sentence.
scalf, verb, where you simply ditch someone even though you made plans with them
-Lecturing -Lectured _________ Or simply: to lecture. Lecture is a verb its forms are: lecture / lectures / lectured / lecturing
The predicate is simply a fancy word for "verb". The simple predicate is only the verb, and the complete predicate includes the verb, modifiers (adjectives and adverbs), and prepositional phrases that usually is the rest of the sentence after the verb. (Except in poetry)