was
excited is both an adjective and a verb. so, yes.
Well an adverb describes a verb, so upstairs is the adverb, and in the sentence it modifies the verb keeps.
I lay in the sun. (The verb in this sentence is intransitive, meaning it does not have an object, so you should use the past tense of the verb to lie, which is lay. The similar-meaning verb to lay, the past tense of which is laid, is a transitive verb, so the subject of the sentence would need to lay something "in the sun.")
"They walked" is a sentence. This is so because it contains a verb and a subject for that verb.
The sentence uses a mixed compound subject connected by nor so the verb agrees with the singular subject that is closer.
excited is both an adjective and a verb. so, yes.
Well an adverb describes a verb, so upstairs is the adverb, and in the sentence it modifies the verb keeps.
In your example, "are excited" is a linking verb. Normally, an action verb shows some kind of activity-- to run, to jump, to hike, to eat, etc. But a linking verb only shows the state of being of the subject-- and no action. Some of the most common linking verb include: "is," "are," "was," "were," "will be," and sometimes "seems" or "becomes." So, a sentence like "Kevin, Charles and Mark are excited because their team won the prize" would have a linking verb-- are excited describes how Kevin, Charles and Mark are feeling.
I lay in the sun. (The verb in this sentence is intransitive, meaning it does not have an object, so you should use the past tense of the verb to lie, which is lay. The similar-meaning verb to lay, the past tense of which is laid, is a transitive verb, so the subject of the sentence would need to lay something "in the sun.")
No, in the given sentence, the word 'talk' is a verb (can talk).A sentence for the noun 'talk' is:"We'll come into the sitting room so we can have a talk." (the noun 'talk' is the direct object of the verb 'can have')
I'm excited because I got a new roflcopter! I am excited and delighted to see you today! I was so excited, I exited the building.
I'm happy to help you with this! However, it seems like you haven't provided the sentence or the options for me to choose the correct verb. Please provide more context so I can assist you accurately.
Never isn't a verb, so a sentence with it as a verb would be grammatically incorrect.
Does it have a subject and a verb? The subject is "They" and the verb is "made" so it is a sentence. A proper sentence must have a subject and a verb and make sense.
They - pronoun are - verb so - adverb cute - adjective
"They walked" is a sentence. This is so because it contains a verb and a subject for that verb.
Please provide the sentence so I can determine if the verb is active or passive.