The sentence, 'You eat the giant artichoke.' has no helping verb, only the main verb 'eat'. The same sentence with sample helping verbs added:
You can eat the giant artichoke.
You will eat the giant artichoke.
You did eat the giant artichoke.
You should eat the giant artichoke.
The helping verb is will; the main verb is eat.
"will" is the helping verb in the sentence "Nick will eat spaghetti for dinner." Will creates the future tense of eat.
Ate
can, read, eat, carry on..Many verbs contain two or more words: a main verb and a helping verb. The main verb expresses what the subject does or links the subject to descriptive words. The helping verb combines with the main verb to indicate tense, negative structure, or question structure.In the following example, the main verb has been underlined and the helping verb has been italicized: Researchers areconducting fieldwork all over the world.
An auxiliary verb comes before the main verb in a sentence.For example, in the sentence, "He would eat ten hot dogs in this state," would is the auxiliary verb; it comes before eat, which is the main verb.
Helping verbs like "have," "has," "had," "will," "would," "should," "could," "might," and "may" can be used to form the past participle of a verb. For example, in the sentence "I have eaten," "have" is the helping verb that forms the past participle "eaten."
is waiting are waiting was waiting have waited had waited has been waiting
No, "eat" is a verb. It describes the action of consuming food.
Giant pandas eat bamboo.
Yes. "Will eat" is a verb phrase, qualifying it as a verb in the future tense.
No, the word "eat" is not an adverb.The word eat is a verb, because it is an action. As in "to eat something".
no they are to big they will eat the giant squid.