Spanish: Yo (veo) (reír) a la niña
English: I (see) the girl (laugh)
Yes, a sentence can contain two infinitive phrases. Infinitive phrases typically start with "to" followed by a verb and can function as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs. For example, in the sentence "She loves to read and to write," both "to read" and "to write" serve as infinitive phrases that complement the verb "loves."
Two negative modifiers used with the verb of a sentence are "not" and "never." These words modify the verb to create a negative meaning in the sentence.
The verb in the sentence is "are." It is a form of the verb "to be" indicating the existence or presence of something.
The two basic part of a sentence are the subject and verb (predicate).
The term 'found out' is not a noun.The term 'found out' is a verb phrase; a verb (found) adverb (out) combination.Example sentence: We found out the best way to do it by trial and error.
no. a sentence needs a subject/obect and a verb
A subject is a sentence with a noun in it. So you would have two nouns in that sentence. A verb is an action word. So a sentence with two subjects and one verb must include two nouns and one action word. for example: Sally and Ikicked a ball. Sally and the word I are the nouns. (a noun is a person,place,thing, or an idea)The verb of this sentence would be kicked. I think a sentence with two subjects and one verb is called a compound sentence. I hope this answered your question!
Are is the verb. Cassettes is the subject.
Venir is a regular and stem-changing verb in Spanish.
Subject and verb are two important parts of a sentence. The subject is the person or thing that the sentence is about, and the verb is the action that the subject is doing. Together, they form the basic structure of a sentence.
You need a subject and a verb
A sentence with a compound subject.Bob and I went to the movies. Bob and I is the compound subject, went is the verb.