seems
No it is a linking verb
No. Seems is a copula ('linking' verb).
it is a linking verb. "Seems" "tastes" "smells" are all the same kind of verb, what one of my old teacher called "Wannabe Verbs", meaning they want to be a "Being Verb" (be, is, was, might be, etc. etc.) The soup seems good..... SEEMS is a Linking Verb to GOOD, which is the PREDICATE ADJECTIVE
Usally Jim seems relaxed before a race.
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.
Yes, "seems" is a linking verb.
The linking verb in that sentence is "seems".
Like is not a linking verb. A linking verb connects the subject to other information. Here is an example: She seems like a really nice person. Seems is the linking verb, because she, being the subject, seems like a really nice person.
Yes Seems is a linking word. ( I'm not that sure though, so don't consider my answer.) : )
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.
The linking of various ideas in the essay helped create a cohesive argument.
No it is a linking verb
No. Seems is a copula ('linking' verb).
it is a linking verb. "Seems" "tastes" "smells" are all the same kind of verb, what one of my old teacher called "Wannabe Verbs", meaning they want to be a "Being Verb" (be, is, was, might be, etc. etc.) The soup seems good..... SEEMS is a Linking Verb to GOOD, which is the PREDICATE ADJECTIVE
seems
Yes, an adjective can be used as a subject complement after a linking verb to describe or rename the subject. For example, in the sentence "She is happy," "happy" is an adjective serving as a subject complement that describes the subject "She."
No.A linking verb links the subject of a sentence with the information that it's about.List of Linking Verbs:to be (is, am, are, was, were, has been, have been, had been, is being, are being, was being, will have been, etc.)to become (become, becomes, became, has become, have become, had become, will become, will have become, etc.)to seem (seemed, seeming, seems, has seemed, have seemed, had seemed, is seeming, are seeming, was seeming, were seeming, will seem)