Yes, chased, the past tense of chase, is an action and therefore a verb.
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
Yes, chasing is the present participle of the verb to chase.
Chased is the past tense and past participle of the verb chase:The dog chased the rabbit into the bushes.
"The boy chased the dog" is a complete sentence. The verb, chased, is transitive. The object is "dog".
No, chase isn't an adjective. It is a verb, or a noun (pursuit). It can be used as an adjunct as in the movie term "chase scene."
It can have a two part verb but it doesn't have to.In an active sentence we can see who or what does the action of the verb:The cat chased the mouse. -- cat is the subject, chased is the verb and mouse is the object. The cat does the action, chase.In this next sentence we don't know who or what does the action:The mouse was chased. -- was chased is the verb.This sentence is a passive sentence.Here is an active sentence with a two part verb:I picked up my son from school.here is the same sentence in passive tense:My son was picked late yesterday.
The word chase is both a noun and a verb (chase, chases, chasing, chased). Example uses: As a noun: The chase to catch up with the bus left us breathless. As a verb: If you chase after him but he won't respect you.
The verb eg subject = dog verb = chased object = cat The dog chased the cat
The verb shows the action the subject is the doer of the action egThe dog chased the cat.The dog (subject ) chased (verb - action)
subject = Mr Williams verb = chased - past tense of chase.
Chased is the past tense and past participle of the verb chase:The dog chased the rabbit into the bushes.
chased
"The boy chased the dog" is a complete sentence. The verb, chased, is transitive. The object is "dog".
It is active. Hunter chased. If the sentence went like this: The lion was chased by the hunter, then it would be passive.
The dog chased the cat .In this sentence the subject is dog the verb is chased and the object is cat.The object usually describes someone or something to which or for whom the action of the verb is done.In the sentence above something was chases, what was chased? - the cat.
The pronoun 'her' is the object of the verb 'chased'.The corresponding subject pronoun is 'she'; for example:She was chased across the meadow by the wolves.
The word that receives the action of the verb and answers the question "what" or "whom" is called the direct object.
The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object of the verb is a different form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister); or the subject becomes the object (My feet got wet. feet->wet). In the sentence, "Ellen could have chased the hockey puck into the corner.", Ellen is not and does not become the hockey puck. The verb, "could have chased" is an action verb.
No, chase isn't an adjective. It is a verb, or a noun (pursuit). It can be used as an adjunct as in the movie term "chase scene."