Yes, a sentence can have any number of verbs, for example:
We washed, dried, and put away the dishes.
He went to the ballpark after he came home from school and changed his clothes.
Jane sings and dances while James operatesthe music and films the action.
Yes, depending on the tense you could even have three auxilliary (helping) verbs, e.g. future perfect continuous of the verb go = I will have been going
To be a sentence, it must have a subject and a verb. Usually, it has a max of two.Thanks for using Answers.com!Actually you can have several verbs in a sentence.sentence = I am writing an answer for you.This sentence has two verbs. One present participle - writing - and one be verb - am.sentence = I have been writing answers all day.This sentence has three verbs. One auxiliary verb - has. One be verb - been and one present participle - writing.a complex sentence = I have eaten lunch but Jon hasn't eaten lunch.This sentence has four verbs. Two auxiliary verbs - haveand negative has, and two past participles - eaten.a passive sentence = The bread is going to be baked soon.This sentence has four verbs. Two be verbs - is and be. A present participle - going and a past participle - baked
normal verbs non continuous verbs (include abstract, possession and emotional verbs) mixed verbs There are divisions and sub divisions according to syntax. Finite verbs - transitive and intransitive verbs non finite verbs - infinitives, gerunds and participles helping verbs (auxiliaries) primary and modal
The verbs in the sentence are "mowed" and "after school."
Verbs can express actions, states, events, or occurrences in a sentence. They indicate what the subject of a sentence is doing or experiencing. Verbs can also convey tense, mood, and aspect in a sentence.
Yes, depending on the tense you could even have three auxilliary (helping) verbs, e.g. future perfect continuous of the verb go = I will have been going
To be a sentence, it must have a subject and a verb. Usually, it has a max of two.Thanks for using Answers.com!Actually you can have several verbs in a sentence.sentence = I am writing an answer for you.This sentence has two verbs. One present participle - writing - and one be verb - am.sentence = I have been writing answers all day.This sentence has three verbs. One auxiliary verb - has. One be verb - been and one present participle - writing.a complex sentence = I have eaten lunch but Jon hasn't eaten lunch.This sentence has four verbs. Two auxiliary verbs - haveand negative has, and two past participles - eaten.a passive sentence = The bread is going to be baked soon.This sentence has four verbs. Two be verbs - is and be. A present participle - going and a past participle - baked
No, that's not a run-on sentence. Technically, it's a simple sentence with a compound verb. It contains a single subject and three verbs. "You" is the subject of the sentence. The three verbs are "went," "ate" and "ate." In other words, there is one person doing three actions. Admittedly, it's not a very goodsentence, but it is grammatically correct.
normal verbs non continuous verbs (include abstract, possession and emotional verbs) mixed verbs There are divisions and sub divisions according to syntax. Finite verbs - transitive and intransitive verbs non finite verbs - infinitives, gerunds and participles helping verbs (auxiliaries) primary and modal
The verbs in the sentence are "mowed" and "after school."
Verbs can express actions, states, events, or occurrences in a sentence. They indicate what the subject of a sentence is doing or experiencing. Verbs can also convey tense, mood, and aspect in a sentence.
They modify verbs, adjectives and adverbs.
The action verbs in the sentence are "peeled" and "boiled."
Two or more verbs that share the same subject are called a
Yes, a sentence can have two verbs. This is known as a compound verb, where two or more verbs are connected to the same subject.
A verb series is a sequence of two or more verbs that are connected within a sentence. These verbs work together to describe the action or state of being in a more specific or nuanced way. Verb series can include modal verbs, auxiliary verbs, or main verbs.
The future tense of the sentence "Are you ready to learn about verbs?" would be "Will you be ready to learn about verbs?"