Dusty
Were is the verb in that sentence.
Ran is the verb in that sentence>
Startled is the verb in your sentence.
Yes it it a verb. For example: I wonder what my grades are. Wondering is what I am doing, an action word, so it is a verb. Adverbs usually end in -ly, so if it was an adverb it would be 'wonderingly'.
If the verb is the whole sentence, then it is not a sentence, but a sentence fragment. A sentence requires at least a subject and a verb. Examples of Sentence Fragments: Run. Hide. Watch.
The word "peered" is a verb.An example sentence is:He peered through the dusty window.
Wonder is a verb. Wonder is also a noun. Wonder is NOT an adjective or preposition.
The word there'll is a contraction, a shortened form of the pronoun 'there' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'will', used to express the future tense of a main verb.The contraction functions as the subject and verb (or auxiliary verb) of a sentence or a clause.Note: The word "there" is a pronoun only when it introduces a sentence or a clause. The word "there" also functions as an interjection, an adverb, and a noun. The noun "there" is a word for a place.Examples:There will be rain this afternoon.ORThere'll be rain this afternoon.I wonder if there will be practice today.ORI wonder if there'll be practice today.
The word wonder is a verb. The past tense is wondered. Wonder can also be a noun.
The verb in the sentence "How are they different" is "are."
Is is the verb in your sentence.
The word there'll is a contraction, a shortened form for 'there' and 'will'.The word 'there' as used in the contraction is a pronoun used to introduce a sentence or a clause.The word 'will' as used in the contraction is an auxiliary verb used to express the future tense of a main verb.The contraction there'll functions as the subject and auxiliary verb of a sentence or a clause. Examples:There will be rain this afternoon. Or, There'll be rain this afternoon.I wonder if there will be practice today. Or, I wonder if there'll be practice today.
I am introspection and putting them in my diary.
No, it is not a proper sentence, and it uses the noun 'criticism' where the verb 'criticise' is required. Here is one correct version (others are possible): 'I wonder if Napoleon had ever criticised himself before.'
The verb in that sentence is "are".
Were is the verb in that sentence.
'Needs' would be the verb in this sentence.