Under is a preposition. a verb is something that a person does, like running, or jumping or combing your hair.
Care is a noun and a verb. Noun: You should be under the care of a doctor. Verb: I say these things because I care.
You would have the adjective clause under the subject. The independent clause could be the verb and the thing describing the verb would be under it.
Gaze can be a verb or a noun: He liked to sit on the deck at sunset and gaze at the mountains. It was difficult to remain calm under his penetrating gaze.
No, under is not a pronoun:Under is a preposition, a word that introduces a noun phrase: I keep it under the stairs.Under is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb: The stream passed under the bridge.Under is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: The under side of the cookies burned.
The word testimonial is a noun. It is a statement given under oath.
Preposition
The verb see is the simple present form of the verb.
verb
no, it is an adverb
noun
Under isn't a verb and so doesn't have a past tense.
'Under' isn't a verb and so doesn't have a past tense.
"Has" is a verb and is classified as a helping verb or auxiliary verb. It is used to show possession, as in "She has a cat," or to form the perfect tenses, as in "He has eaten."
To put a patch or patches on.
under the verb. call it IO
Noun phrase: I, the doll Verb phrase: hid Prepositional phrase: under the banana pelts
Experiment can be a noun and a verb. Noun: A test under controlled conditions. Verb: To conduct an experiment.