No, the word 'child' is a noun, not a verb. The word 'baby' can be used as both a noun and verb.
Child is the subject, 'gets' is the verb; 'gets his way' is the complete predicate.A predicate is the verb and all the words that follow that relate to that verb.
As a child is the object phrase modifying piano you is the pronoun subject practiced is the verb piano is the direct object.
Underline the verb in each sentence? A governess raises a child in a private home.
spoiled
Spot can be a noun and a verb. Noun: There is a spot on the floor. Verb: He spotted the child hiding behind the door.
Underline the verb in each sentence? A governess raises a child in a private home.
The verb is 'was broken'. It is the 3rd person singular past passive of the verb 'to break'.
"The child" takes the third person singular conjugation of a verb. For the verb be, present tense is "is", and past tense is "was".
No, it is a noun. A son is a male child (human offspring), whose direct ancestor is his father.
It can be used as both a noun and a verb: "I adopted an orphan yesterday." (noun) "This child was orphaned because his parents died." (verb)
No. There is no verb.
The verb form of "father" is "fathered." It is used to describe the act of someone becoming a father to a child.