brought is the action verb
I like cherry jam, but he does not. They are good, but they have some flaws. I want to go to the party, but I'm ill.
That is a gerund, which is a verb with an -ing ending. It acts as a verb showing ongoing action in a sentence, but requires the help of a linking verb. "He was going to the store." was + going
That is a gerund, which is a verb with an -ing ending. It acts as a verb showing ongoing action in a sentence, but requires the help of a linking verb. "He was going to the store." was + going
It is a simple sentence
A sentence fragment is an incomplete sentence. For example these have periods, but are not sentences:I wanted. We were. When I was there. While he was in the store. If you had.
a good sentence for brought is ... When I went to school I brought my bookbag .or..... I went to the store and brought my little brother with me.
I brought homemade cookies to the party, while other people brought store cookies.
The subject is the one doing the action or what the sentence is about. Examples: She is going to the store. (She is the subject). I am hungry. (I would be the subject). The action that takes place in a sentence is the verb.
A verb is an action verb if it is something that is happening, and that has some effect; for example, in the sentence "I walk to the store," walk is an action verb because the subject, I, is performing a task. In the sentence, "I am at the store," am is a being verb because it describes a state of being; the subject, I, IS as the store.
When i was in the store it started raining, fortunately i had brought my umbrella
She walked to the store yesterday.
The term you are looking for is "verb." Verbs are words that express an action, occurrence, or state of being in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "He ran to the store," the word "ran" is a verb because it describes the action the subject ("He") is performing.
A general working rule is to remove the 'other person'. The sentence, 'You and I went to town' should make just as much sense when you remove the 'you': 'I went to town'. If you had said, 'You and me went to town' then you would be left with, 'Me went to town,' which is obviously wrong! What about this: 'He brought cake for you and me' 'He brought cake for me' which is correct. 'He brought cake for you and I' 'He brought cake for I'. is incorrect. Make sense?
It depends on the structure of the sentence.Ex.(when to use " I ")I went to the store.(When to use " me ")Macy went to the store with me.
at walmart
The verb in the sentence "Reggie bought a computer today at the store for 700" is "bought." This verb indicates the action performed by the subject, Reggie, as he acquired a computer. There are no additional verbs in this sentence.
at any store like a little grocery store