No. "New" is an adjective. A closely related verb is "renew".
The verb is "like" The direct object is "home"
The verb form of "new" is "renew." It means to make something new again or to restore its freshness or vigor.
A verb phrase can contain one verb or more than one verb.Auxiliary verbs help a main verb to make up a verb phrase:modal + verb -- The new library could open tomorrow.have/has + past participle -- The new library has opened.be + present participle -- The new library is openingtomorrow.be + past participle -- The new library was opened by the Mayor.
went
No, the word "new" is not a verb. It is an adjective used to describe something that has recently come into existence or has not been used before.
No new is an adjective, renew is a verb
The verb is "like" The direct object is "home"
The verb form of "new" is "renew." It means to make something new again or to restore its freshness or vigor.
You question is not clear. The verb clear can be used in the progressive form: I am creating a new fad. We have been creating a new fad. She has been creating new designs.
Was opening is the verb phrase.Open is a regular verb.
A verb phrase can contain one verb or more than one verb.Auxiliary verbs help a main verb to make up a verb phrase:modal + verb -- The new library could open tomorrow.have/has + past participle -- The new library has opened.be + present participle -- The new library is openingtomorrow.be + past participle -- The new library was opened by the Mayor.
The verb "to invent" is an action verb. It describes the action of creating something entirely new.
Verb: Call
Benefit can be a verb. We both benefit from the new law changes
went
(The) members = subject visited = verb
The word "new" can be used as both an adjective and a verb. As an adjective, it describes a noun as being recent or not previously known. As a verb, it can mean to make something new or to start fresh.