yes
"was falling" is the verb phrase.
You need 1 capital letter 2 proper sentence structure ( subject noun, verb) 3 end mark
Am can be used as a linking verb for the first person singular, as in "I am awake". It can also be used as a helping verb, again in the first person singular, such as in "I am typing a sentence".
An inverted subject is when the subject and verb are inverted in a sentence. An example of an inverted subject used in a sentence 'Scarcely had a put down the phone when it ran again.' In this sentence, the verb comes before the subject.
The contraction there'd is a shortened form for the adverb 'here' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'would'. The contraction there'd functions as the verb in a sentence or clause. Examples:I was told there would be a late fee. Or, I was told there'd be a late fee.
it is coming
There is no preposition in the sentence "The plane was late." The - article plane - noun (subject) was - linking verb late - predicate adjective
A capital letter, a punctuation mark, and a verb.
"was falling" is the verb phrase.
I'm contemplating the answer again.
The word shouldn't is a contraction, a shortened form for the verb 'should' and the adverb 'not'. The contraction functions in a sentence as the verb or auxiliary verb. Examples:You should not be late on your first day. OR: You shouldn't be late on your first day.
One example of a regular verb is "walk." Sentence: She walks to the park every morning.
There is only one verb, the main verb 'taught'. There are no helper verbs in your sentence.
No, shouldn't is a contraction, a shortened form for 'should not' a verb and the adverb not. The contraction shouldn't functions as a verb (or auxiliary verb) in a sentence. Example: You should not be late for school. or You shouldn't be late for school.
The future tense! However the question should have been preceded by a comma and put in inverted commas ending with a question mark! There should be no question mark in this sentence this is not a question.
An interrogative sentence typically begins with an auxiliary verb (like "is," "are," "do," or "can") or a question word (such as "who," "what," "where," "when," or "why"). This is followed by the subject and the main verb. For example, in the question "Are you coming to the party?" the structure is auxiliary verb ("Are"), subject ("you"), and main verb ("coming"). The sentence often ends with a question mark.
To change a declarative sentence into a question, you can typically add a question word (who, what, when, where, why, how) at the beginning of the sentence, invert the subject and the verb, or add a question mark at the end.