He was not able to pen the letter as he had broken his finger. She was able to pen the check on the spot. The pig pen was full of filth and stank.
Indicative (:
have/has/had are 'action verbs' when they are followed by a noun, eg. i have a pen - is the action of having or owning a pen. when they are used in a sentence such as 'i have played football' they then become an auxiallary verb, in this case to the verb played.
The sentence "Buster has escaped from his dog pen" is in the indicative mood, which is used for statements of fact.
The word 'use' functions as a noun or a verb in a sentence.The noun 'use' can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.The verb 'use' tells what the subject does.Example sentences for the noun 'use':I must thank Jim for the use of his car.The use of foul language is not permitted here.Example sentences for the verb 'use':You may use my pen to write the note.We use English to answer these questions.
does is not a modal verb
The farmer has to herd his sheep into the pen.
Indicative (:
have/has/had are 'action verbs' when they are followed by a noun, eg. i have a pen - is the action of having or owning a pen. when they are used in a sentence such as 'i have played football' they then become an auxiallary verb, in this case to the verb played.
The sentence "Buster has escaped from his dog pen" is in the indicative mood, which is used for statements of fact.
Sentence- THIS pen is mine and that one is yours.
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.
With a pen :)
A transitive verb is a type of action verb that takes a direct object.Examples:Kevin threw the ball.Please hand me a pen. ("me" is an indirect object)
The correct phrase is "I have a pen." It is grammatically correct and follows the subject-verb-object sentence structure (I-subject, have-verb, a pen-object). The phrase "My have a pen" is grammatically incorrect as it does not follow standard English syntax.
The word 'use' functions as a noun or a verb in a sentence.The noun 'use' can function as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.The verb 'use' tells what the subject does.Example sentences for the noun 'use':I must thank Jim for the use of his car.The use of foul language is not permitted here.Example sentences for the verb 'use':You may use my pen to write the note.We use English to answer these questions.
Herb is a noun not a verb.
Yes, a sentence can have more than one direct object. For example: "She bought a book and a pen." In this sentence, "book" and "pen" are both direct objects of the verb "bought."