No As It Is Not In The Rule
No, "should" is a modal verb used to indicate obligation, necessity, or recommendation. It is not a liking verb.
The word 'likely' is an adjective and an adverb, not a verb.The verb forms are like, likes, liking, liked.The noun forms are like, likes.The noun form of the adjective likely is likeliness.The noun form of the verb to like is the gerund, liking.
No, "follow" is not a preposition. It is a verb that means to come after or behind something or someone.
Followed up. Follow is the verb in this phrasal verb and only the verb changes with tense change. Follow is a regular verb so the past participle is +ed = followed.
Yes, a predicate nominative can follow a linking verb, where it renames or refers to the subject. However, it does not typically follow an action verb, which instead connects the subject to a direct object.
No, "should" is a modal verb used to indicate obligation, necessity, or recommendation. It is not a liking verb.
come, arrived
what follows a linking or action verb
"Follow" already is an action verb!
The word 'likely' is an adjective and an adverb, not a verb.The verb forms are like, likes, liking, liked.The noun forms are like, likes.The noun form of the adjective likely is likeliness.The noun form of the verb to like is the gerund, liking.
The verb "follow" becomes a noun in the word "follower".
No, "follow" is not a preposition. It is a verb that means to come after or behind something or someone.
prase
Followed up. Follow is the verb in this phrasal verb and only the verb changes with tense change. Follow is a regular verb so the past participle is +ed = followed.
Yes, the word liked is a verb.Other verbs are like, likes and liking.
two many verbs - I am go to the station. wrong tense - I go to the station yesterday. wrong verb form - I am liking this.
Yes, a predicate nominative can follow a linking verb, where it renames or refers to the subject. However, it does not typically follow an action verb, which instead connects the subject to a direct object.