No, it's either a noun, adjective, adverb.
No, was is a verb (past tense, along with were, of the verb to be).
No, 'was' is a verb, or an auxiliary verb; past tense of the verb to be. Examples:main verb: He was the winner.auxiliary verb: He was elected class president.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.
Was is an example of irregular verb. Was is the past form of be. Here's the definition of irregular verb and regular verb. IRREGULAR VERB A verb that does not follow the usual rules for verb forms: be, is, are/ was, were , been REGULAR VERB A verb that forms its past tense and past participle by adding -d or -ed to the base form: walk, walked, walked; shout, shouted, shouted.
Yes, had can be used as a verb. And, it can also be an adverb. Yes, it is used as a verb in some causes not in all. "Had" is a helping verb to and an adverb.
Yes.The word WILL is a helping verb.
The sentence, 'You eat the giant artichoke.' has no helping verb, only the main verb 'eat'. The same sentence with sample helping verbs added:You can eat the giant artichoke.You will eat the giant artichoke.You did eat the giant artichoke.You should eat the giant artichoke.
No, "giant" is not a linking verb. In this context, "giant" is functioning as an adjective describing the noun it precedes. A linking verb connects the subject of a sentence to a subject complement, which renames or describes the subject.
there would be no verb in that sentance.
The subject of the sentence is attractions and the verb is is.
The past tense is slew..As, "David slew the giant Goliath".
No, giant is not an adverb. An adverb is any word that describes a verb(action words such as jumped, ran or swam). You can easily identify some adverbs because they end in ly. Although not all adverbs end in ly.
die Riesen = giants(unless, of course, you meant reisen, which is the verb for 'to travel.')
Verb: The giant wave forced the ship to keel over on its side into the ocean, and all the men fell overboard. Noun: There was a large hole in the keel of the boat, so the vessel pulled into port to have it repaired.
Giant can be used as a noun (a giant) and an adjective (a giant tree).
Andre the giant
more giant, most giant
female giant panda=female giant panda male giant panda=male giant panda baby giant panda=baby giant panda x