A verb
His action was justified.
A verb in a sentence shows action or tells information about the action. It indicates what the subject is doing or what is happening in the sentence. Without a verb, a sentence would not express any action or convey information about it.
The action in a sentence is the part of speech known as a verb.
it is an action
The subject is the one doing the action or what the sentence is about. Examples: She is going to the store. (She is the subject). I am hungry. (I would be the subject). The action that takes place in a sentence is the verb.
The subject of the sentence performs the action. The subject is typically a noun, pronoun, or noun phrase that is doing the action described in the sentence.
To locate the subject of a sentence, identify who or what the sentence is about. The subject is usually a noun or pronoun that performs the action of the sentence. Look for the main verb in the sentence and ask "Who or what is doing the action?" to determine the subject.
An object sentence typically refers to a sentence structure where the subject performs an action on the object. For example, "She read a book." In this sentence, "She" is the subject, "read" is the action, and "a book" is the object of the action.
The action NEVER performs the subject. The subject can perform the action -- this is an active sentence has the word order S V O eg The dog chased the cat. In a passive sentence the action is performed on the subject. The cat was chased
The action verbs in the sentence are "peeled" and "boiled."
No it is the person place or thing (noun), the action is a verb which is the predicate.
False. The subject of a sentence is the person, place, thing, or idea that is being talked about or performing the action in the sentence. The action is typically carried out by the verb.