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"Beautiful" as an adjective is a quality. One does not "beautiful." To make something beautiful is to beautify, which is a verb. To "be beautiful" is just that- a verb phrase but "be" is still your verb.
Yes, the word works. The word is an action performed by the subject Mary. Mary works every day
'The beautiful dance' is a phrase. Sentences and clauses must contain a finite verb.
If you reword the sentence, it will make things easier. In English, most sentences have the structure of SVO (subject, verb, object), with prepositional phrases at the beginning or end of the sentence, or after the subject or object. This sentence has the structure of VS (verb, subject) (there is no object) with the prepositional phrase at the beginning. "On the sand" is the prepositional phrase. We will put this at the end of the sentence. To order this sentence correctly, we must switch the subject and the verb (VS to SV). Now the sentence reads, "A beautiful seashell lay on the sand." "Seashell" is the subject. Note: "Beautiful" is not part of the subject, it is only an adjective modifying the subject.
Yes, "Maria is beautiful" is a sentence because it has a subject and a verb.
landscaping
Very is the adverb. An adverb describes a verb, and very describes how beautiful the autumn day was.
"The" is an article (adjective) "house" is a noun "was" is a linking verb (verb) "beautiful" is an adjective
In the sentence "A beautiful sunny day dawned," there is no need for a comma, as it is a simple declarative sentence with a clear subject and verb. If additional information were added, such as in a compound sentence or a list, a comma might be necessary. However, in its current form, the sentence stands perfectly without punctuation.
The leaves turning red and yellow are beautiful. -- This sentence is correct.The subject of the sentence = the leaves. This is a plural subject - more than one. The subject and verb must agree, this means if you have a plural subject you must have a plural verb form. The plural verb in this sentence is 'are'.The leaves' turning red and yellow is beautiful. -- This sentence is not correct'Is' is not a plural verb it is a singular verb.The main clause in this sentence is -- 'The leaves are beautiful''turning red and brown' -- is a subordinate clause
No, in the sentence, "I'm beautiful." there are no nouns.The parts of speech are of the sentence are:I'm, a contraction for "I am", the subject pronoun and the verb of the sentence.beautiful, an adjective, functioning as a subject complement (predicate adjective) following the linking verb "am" (I = beautiful).
Yes, it is possible to have a sentence with a verb and without a helping verb. For example, "He runs every day" is a sentence that contains the verb "runs" without a helping verb.
The snow day was beautiful and fun.
Ride can be a noun, or it can be a verb; it depends on how you use it. As a verb: He likes to ride on his motorcycle. She rides on the Number 8 bus every day. As a noun: My car is broken, so will you give me a ride to town? It's a beautiful day to take a ride in the country.
Smile (verb) -- I smiled at the man. Smile (noun) -- She has a beautiful smile.
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