Dollars isn't a verb. It is a noun.
The given sentence has got two clauses: First one is a main or principal clause, "Elena thinks" where the subject 'Elena' is first person singular which agrees with the verb 'thinks'. Second clause is a subordinate one: "five dollars are a lot of money". In this, 'five dollars', even though apparently a plural noun does work as singular noun, is the subject of verb 'are'. As 'a lot of money', the object of the verb 'are', is considered singular since the article 'a' makes it a singular entity, the verb 'are' does not agree with it. Actually the verb 'is' should be substituted for 'are' ("Elena thinks [that] five dollars is a lot money"). Hope this explanation clears the confusion.
Dabitur is "will be given" with a third-person subject (he, she, it).In Latin, only the thing given can be used as the subject (as in English "Ten dollars will be given to charity"), never the recipient (as in English "The charity will be given ten dollars").
Students wish they didn't have to write example sentences. I wish I had a million dollars.
"Had" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "have."
Examples of words ending in -tch with their corresponding parts of speech:batch = verb, nounblotch = verb, nouncatch = verb, nounclutch = verb, noun, adjectivecrutch = nounditch = verb, nounDutch = noun, adjectivedutch = adverbfetch = verb, nounglitch = verb, nounhatch = verb, nounhutch = nounitch = verb, nounlatch = verb, nounmatch = verb, nounpatch = verb, nounpitch = verb, nounscratch = verb, noun, adjectivesketch = verb, nounstitch = verb, nounstretch = verb, noun, adjectiveswitch = verb, nounthatch = verb, nountwitch = verb, nounwatch = verb, nounwitch = verb, noun
il lui manque cinq dollars
The given sentence has got two clauses: First one is a main or principal clause, "Elena thinks" where the subject 'Elena' is first person singular which agrees with the verb 'thinks'. Second clause is a subordinate one: "five dollars are a lot of money". In this, 'five dollars', even though apparently a plural noun does work as singular noun, is the subject of verb 'are'. As 'a lot of money', the object of the verb 'are', is considered singular since the article 'a' makes it a singular entity, the verb 'are' does not agree with it. Actually the verb 'is' should be substituted for 'are' ("Elena thinks [that] five dollars is a lot money"). Hope this explanation clears the confusion.
have=aruEx. I have ten dollars.= Watashi WA 10 doru arimasu. (conjugated form)
Dabitur is "will be given" with a third-person subject (he, she, it).In Latin, only the thing given can be used as the subject (as in English "Ten dollars will be given to charity"), never the recipient (as in English "The charity will be given ten dollars").
The word 'each' as an adjective takes no verb itself, the verb is determined by the noun that it describes which is normally a singular noun; each one has, each person is, each tree has, each time is, etc.As an adverb, 'each' modifies a plural verb; they eachreceive ten dollars, the tickets are two dollars each, the ducks each have their own nest, etc.As a pronoun, 'each' takes a singular verb; each has, each is, each connects, each receives, etc.
A transitive verb has two characteristics.First, it is an action verb, expressing a doable activity like kick, want, listen, write, eat, clean, etc.Second, it must have a direct object, something or someone who receives the action of the verb.Two dollars is the direct object. Gave is something you can do therefore gave is a transitive verb
Allowance is a noun.Example sentence:Sarah receives ten dollars for her allowance each week.The company does not make any allowance for absences caused by weather.
Inherit is a verb. She was due to inherit over a million dollars from her grandfather, who had built his successful business from the ground up.
-verb (used with object)to deprive of a right, money, or property by fraud: Dishonest employees defrauded the firm of millions of dollars.
We will help and will aid those in need in the community.help out.I help out at the library after school.help upHelp me up I am stuck! Can you help me out with a few dollars?help downDo you want me to help you down the stairs.
Students wish they didn't have to write example sentences. I wish I had a million dollars.
As an adjective - He made a deliberate mistake and cost us hundreds of dollars. As a verb - The jury will deliberate on the evidence and then give their verdict.