Yes, happens is a verb, the third person, singular present of the verb to happen. Example:
Whenever I try to cook, a big mess happens to my kitchen.
During is not any kind of verb. It is a preposition.
It happens.will + verb -- It will happen soon.going to + verb -- It is going to happen soonbe + verb + ing -- It is happening soon.Notice that the third person form happensbecomes happen in these sentences.
No, "throughout" is typically used as a preposition or an adverb, not as a verb. It is used to show that something happens all over a place or for the whole of a time period.
No, it is not a preposition. Waiting is a verb form, or a noun (gerund).
The word recurring is a verb. It is the present participle of the verb recur.
A verb form used to show when something happens is called tense.
helping verb
The baby will the verb.
The predicate is everything in a sentence that is not the subject. A simple predicate is a finite verb e.g. I am, or Stuff happens.
If "happens now" means present tense, no. Told is the past tense of tell.
They will 'echo' back to you...
During is not any kind of verb. It is a preposition.
A verb form used to show when something happens is called tense.
I will deal with whatever happens when the time comes.
No, "naturally" is an adverb, not a verb. Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs by providing more information about when, where, how, or to what extent something happens.
When you add -ing to any verb you get the present participle form:walk - walking listen - listening glisten - glistening
If a verb happens in the past, present, or future