Yes-Example, I went swimming.
The name for the -ing verb form used as a noun is a gerund or verbal noun.
u use a period and a concluding last sentence
Of course, friend! You can end a sentence with 'were' when using it as part of a clause or phrase, like "I remember the days when we were young." Remember, painting with words is like creating a beautiful landscape on a canvas - there are no mistakes, just happy little accidents!
No, because it has a subject and a verb. "Talking" is the subject (it's a gerund: a verb used as a noun. They usually end in -ing, like swimming or running), and "is" is the verb.
Two negative modifiers used with the verb of a sentence are "not" and "never." These words modify the verb to create a negative meaning in the sentence.
can you give a sentence record used in a verb
The name for the -ing verb form used as a noun is a gerund or verbal noun.
u use a period and a concluding last sentence
Of course, friend! You can end a sentence with 'were' when using it as part of a clause or phrase, like "I remember the days when we were young." Remember, painting with words is like creating a beautiful landscape on a canvas - there are no mistakes, just happy little accidents!
No, it's a noun. Incidentally, "end of the week" is not a sentence, it is a phrase.
No, because it has a subject and a verb. "Talking" is the subject (it's a gerund: a verb used as a noun. They usually end in -ing, like swimming or running), and "is" is the verb.
A subject, a verb, and a period at the end
Two negative modifiers used with the verb of a sentence are "not" and "never." These words modify the verb to create a negative meaning in the sentence.
"Are" is a verb, even at the end of a sentence. For example, if you say, "Do you know where the scissors are?", "are" is still a verb. In this case, it is the verb of an embedded question. "Scissors" is the subject of the verb "are".
While the verb can be anywhere in a Latin sentence, as often as not it's found at the very end.
It can be, such as in this sentence "I want you to end this right now!" In this sentence, end acts as an action word and therefore serves as a verb
Do is always a verb either a main verb or an auxiliary verb.