No. Football is a noun.
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 verb play is not generally a linking verb, but it can be used as a linking verb. A linking verb links noun+ noun, pronoun + noun, noun+ adjective, or pronoun + adjective. As it is generally used, the verb play is an action verb: "I play football." It could be used as a linking verb: "The actor played James Bond." (noun + noun)
Here "Played" is transitive verb and "Board" is intransitive verb. As Transitive verb means actions pass through, and intrasitive means actions do not pass, stop with it or other words. The following example will clear it. The boy kicks football. Kicks is a transitive verb, because action is passing from boy to football. The boy loughs loudly. Loughs is an intrasitive verb, as action stops with it, it doesnot pass from the boy to any other word.
The football player had to tackle the receiver so they wouldn't make a touchdown!!
Imitated is a verb.
"Was" is the past tense of the verb "is".
Verb :)
In French, "jouer" is the -ER verb for "to play." ex- Je joue au football.(I play football.)
pronoun
Match can be a verb, as in you can match items together. It is also a noun, as in you can light a fire with a match, or go to a football match.
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 verb play is not generally a linking verb, but it can be used as a linking verb. A linking verb links noun+ noun, pronoun + noun, noun+ adjective, or pronoun + adjective. As it is generally used, the verb play is an action verb: "I play football." It could be used as a linking verb: "The actor played James Bond." (noun + noun)
Down can be a verb, noun, adjective, adverb, or preposition. The noun forms include -- US football play -- Duck and goose feathers -- a grassy upland (UK) The verb form can mean to -- (US football) grounding the ball, especially on a punt -- cause a plane to crash -- drink, especially quickly
The tense of the verb in the sentence "The football players are practicing every day" is present continuous (or present progressive). This tense indicates an action that is currently ongoing.
verb
Here "Played" is transitive verb and "Board" is intransitive verb. As Transitive verb means actions pass through, and intrasitive means actions do not pass, stop with it or other words. The following example will clear it. The boy kicks football. Kicks is a transitive verb, because action is passing from boy to football. The boy loughs loudly. Loughs is an intrasitive verb, as action stops with it, it doesnot pass from the boy to any other word.
Calcio is the Italian word for football (soccer). From the Italian verb calciare - to kick.