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Brycen Goodwin ∙
such a hard worker
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.
The verb phrase in the sentence is "heard that our school is getting a new mascot".
The subject is the pronoun "You".
Note: "that our school is getting a new mascot" is a relative clause functioning as the direct object of the verb 'heard'.
No. Why? And why would you ask this in the internet? ....
will have swum
Intransitive Verb.
and
Action Verb.
"Could have moved" is the verb phrase, but the reflexive pronoun (ourselves) doesn't agree with its antecedent (you).
You could never have moved that tree yourself (yourselves if you is plural).
OR
We could never have moved that tree ourselves.
The only verb in the sentence, "Yesterday you went to the mall", is intransitive. (The verb is "went".)
Is making
transitive
might have gone