As a child is the object phrase modifying piano
you is the pronoun subject
practiced is the verb
piano is the direct object.
wat is a helping verb
Yes, the word practice is both a verb (practice, practices, practicing, practiced) and a noun (practice, practices). Examples: Verb: Do I have to practice the piano every day? Noun: Yes, practice will make you perfect. Noun: There's a new walk-in medical practice at the mall.
There is no adverb in this sentence. First there is no verb either! Second ask an adult!
Child is the subject, 'gets' is the verb; 'gets his way' is the complete predicate.A predicate is the verb and all the words that follow that relate to that verb.
The US spelling is practiced (past tense of to practice).The UK spelling is as asked, practised.
the children practiced on the pianos
Practiced is a verb.
No.
The present perfect tense of the verb "practice" is "have practiced" or "has practiced."
2
As Sally practiced her piano exercises, she used the metronome to help her keep the rhythm written on the music.
wat is a helping verb
Yes, the word practice is both a verb (practice, practices, practicing, practiced) and a noun (practice, practices). Examples: Verb: Do I have to practice the piano every day? Noun: Yes, practice will make you perfect. Noun: There's a new walk-in medical practice at the mall.
The verb in the sentence is "needs to be tuned." To make it present tense, you would say "The piano needs to be tuned."
The adverb in this sentence is "regularly". This is an adverb because it describes the verb, which is "practiced".
The word "practiced" can function as either a past tense verb or an adjective in a sentence.
Learning is the present participle of learn. By its self learning is not singular or plural.Using - be verb + learning - will make a singular or plural verb phrase. eg:I am learning the piano. -- present tenseShe is learning the piano. -- present tenseI was learning the piano. -- past tenseShe was learning the piano. -- past tense