Yes, of course there can be more than one verb in a sentence. Indeed, it would be extremely difficult to restrict every sentence that you ever spoke or wrote to a single verb, and it would make for very dull communication. Here are four random examples of perfectly ordinary sentences containing more than one verb:
'Can you pass me that plate so I can wash it up?'
'I didn't think he'd be at the party.'
'Why won't you look at me when I speak to you?'
'Her cat didn't want to eat the food she gave it this morning.'
A business can provide many types of accommodation for the disable
compound subject
Two or more subjects with the same verb is a compound subject.
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 predicate noun is oak.A predicate is the verb and all the related words that follow it (or, all the words that are not the subject of the verb). A sentence can have more than one verb and more than one complete predicate.
A helping verb,that is in the first part.
The sentence in which the verb is a linking verb uses the verb to connect the subject of the verb to more information about the subject. The linking verb will not express an action.
Two or more subjects with the same verb is a compound subject.
The major verb in a sentence is typically called the main verb. It is the verb that conveys the primary action or state of being in the sentence.
compound subject
the sentence covers more than one time period.
The essential verb or verb phrase that cannot be left out of a sentence is called the main verb. It conveys the action or state of being of the subject in a sentence. Without the main verb, the sentence would be incomplete or nonsensical.
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.
must - is called a modal auxiliary verb, must always goes before a main verb in this sentence the main verb is tripped. have - is an auxiliary verb in this sentence. Both of these can be called helping verbs
The verb phrase is "will retard."
The predicate is the verb and all of the words following the verb that relate to it. A sentence may have more than one predicate. The predicate answers what the subject is or what the subject does.
The predicate noun is oak.A predicate is the verb and all the related words that follow it (or, all the words that are not the subject of the verb). A sentence can have more than one verb and more than one complete predicate.
A helping verb,that is in the first part.
The question is grammatically incorrect, the article "a" should precede the word "verb"; the answer is with a semicolon.