The word been is a verb. It is the past participle of the verb to be.
Yes, most 'helping verbs' (auxiliary verbs) can function as main verbs; for example:He was helping mom with dinner. and He was a friend.She has been attending school. and She has been to Paris. She has a cold.
A helping verb has no meaning on its own. The word want has a meaning, so it is not a helping verb.
Yes, it is a linking verb. Like in, Cuba is a country.
Yes, the verb 'are' can function as a main verb or a helping (auxiliary) verb.Examples:You are a good friend. (verb)We are making pizza. (auxiliary verb)The boys are going to school. (auxiliary verb)
The word been is a verb. It is the past participle of the verb to be.
Yes it can be. The word was can be a main verb or an auxiliary verb (sometimes called a helping verb)
Yes, "have" can function as a helping verb in verb phrases to show tense or aspect in English grammar. It is often used in present perfect and past perfect tenses.
Yes, most 'helping verbs' (auxiliary verbs) can function as main verbs; for example:He was helping mom with dinner. and He was a friend.She has been attending school. and She has been to Paris. She has a cold.
A helping verb can be used in the sentence. The word which precedes the verb is the helping verb.
Helping Verb
Our is not a helping verb. It's a pronoun.
No it is not a verb but is....is a verb you cannot is but it is a helping word he is a i think Pronoun?? not sure but any action word or helping word is a verb
Yes.The word WILL is a helping verb.
the word were is a LINKING VERB.
A helping verb has no meaning on its own. The word want has a meaning, so it is not a helping verb.
The word 'are' is a linking verb and a helping verb; examples:linking: You are beautiful.helping: You are running out of milk.