Underline the verb in each sentence?
A governess raises a child in a private home.
The noun form for the adjective 'happy' is happiness.
Underline the verb in each sentence?
A governess raises a child in a private home.
Underline the verb in each sentence?
A governess raises a child in a private home.
to be happy
Happy verb forms
The verb is was, a form of the verb to be.
"Had" is the past of the verb have, a form of the verb 'to be'.
The word 'were' is a verb, a form of past tense of the verb to be.Example: They were so happy.
ability is the noun form of the adjective able;conversation is the noun form of the verb to converse;dependence is the noun form of the verb to depend;departure is the noun form of the verb to depart;dwelling is the noun form of the verb to dwell;favorite is the noun form of the verb to favor;happiness is the noun form of the adjective happy;information is the noun form of the verb to inform;rarity is the noun form of the adjective rare;weakness is the noun form of the adjective weak;writer is the noun form of the verb to write;writing is also a noun form of the verb to write.
The verb of happiness is happy. As in "to be happy".
No, the word 'happy' is not a verb; happy is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. The noun form is happiness; the adverb form is happily. There is no verb form.
The verb is was, a form of the verb to be.
The past form is 'was', as in "I was very happy."
"Had" is the past of the verb have, a form of the verb 'to be'.
The word happiness is not a verb, it's a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun. There is no verb form for the word happy or happiness, it would be phrased 'make happy', 'be happy' or 'feel happy', etc.
The word 'were' is a verb, a form of past tense of the verb to be.Example: They were so happy.
No, "am" is not a preposition. "Am" is a form of the verb "to be" used in the first person singular present tense. Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun (or pronoun) and other words in a sentence.
The verb in the sentence "Your sister is a happy person" is is (a form of the verb to be). To put this sentence in the future tense, you would say, "Your sister will be a happy person."
ability is the noun form of the adjective able;conversation is the noun form of the verb to converse;dependence is the noun form of the verb to depend;departure is the noun form of the verb to depart;dwelling is the noun form of the verb to dwell;favorite is the noun form of the verb to favor;happiness is the noun form of the adjective happy;information is the noun form of the verb to inform;rarity is the noun form of the adjective rare;weakness is the noun form of the adjective weak;writer is the noun form of the verb to write;writing is also a noun form of the verb to write.
The verb of happiness is happy. As in "to be happy".
No, the word 'happiest' is an adjective. Specifically, 'happiest' is in the superlative form of the adjective 'happy'.
No, the word happy is not a verb; the word happy is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.A linking verb acts as an equals sign; the object of the verb is a different form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister); or the subject becomes the object (Mary's feet got wet. feet->wet).An adjective that follows a linking verb that modifies the subject like other descriptive adjectives is a predicateadjective (also called a subject complement).Examples: Mary is happy. or, Mary looked happy. or, Mary felt happy. Mary was happy after all.