The verb phrase in the sentence is ''would like to see''. It consists of the main verb ''like'' and the infinitive verb phrase ''to see''.
Like is a regular verb so the past participle is verb + ed, = liked
"Like" can serve as both an action verb and a linking verb. As an action verb, it can express preferences or fondness (e.g., "I like chocolate"). As a linking verb, it can connect the subject to a subject complement (e.g., "She looks like her sister").
Verb: They like running. Preposition: He is screaming like a baby.
Have is not like a verb it is a verb! It is an irregular verb.
The verb phrase in the sentence is ''would like to see''. It consists of the main verb ''like'' and the infinitive verb phrase ''to see''.
Like is the main verb. The auxiliary verb is would. The verb phrase is would like.
Like is a regular verb so the past participle is verb + ed, = liked
"Like" can serve as both an action verb and a linking verb. As an action verb, it can express preferences or fondness (e.g., "I like chocolate"). As a linking verb, it can connect the subject to a subject complement (e.g., "She looks like her sister").
would like to see = modal + verb + to + verb
SV = Subject Verb (I like cake.)SSV = Subject, Subject, Verb (She and I like cake.)SVV = Subject, Verb, Verb (I like cake and hate yams.)SSVV = Subject, Subject, Verb, Verb (She and I like cake and hate yams.)
would like to see = modal + verb + to + verb
Verb: They like running. Preposition: He is screaming like a baby.
see would like to see = modal + verb + to + verb
would like to see = modal + verb + to + verb
would like to see = modal + verb + to + verb
Have is not like a verb it is a verb! It is an irregular verb.