"Next" can be an adverb, adjective, noun, or preposition, but it is not a verb. Its main function is to indicate something that is coming after or following something else.
No, the fragment "Next to the teacher's big desk" does not have a verb. It is a prepositional phrase that provides information about the location of something but lacks a main action or verb to complete the sentence.
Schedule is both a noun and a verb, e.g. What is your shedule for next week? - noun I have scheduled your meeting for tomorrow at 10 - verb
The verb "will study" is in the future tense in the sentence "Yolanda will study French next year."
The verb tense is correct in the sentence: "She will be running in the race next weekend."
Simple future
Does is always a verb.When does is next to have you can call it an auxiliary verb or helping verb.
No, the fragment "Next to the teacher's big desk" does not have a verb. It is a prepositional phrase that provides information about the location of something but lacks a main action or verb to complete the sentence.
The verb phrase in the sentence "They can take the bus to the next museum" is "can take." This phrase combines the modal verb "can" with the base verb "take," indicating the ability or possibility of the action.
No, "is next to the watermelon" is a predicate. A predicate is a group of words that includes a verb and all of the words related to the verb. The verb in this predicate is "is". To become a sentence, a subject is required. For example:The cheese is next to the watermelon.The row of carrots is next to the watermelon, then a row of of beets next the pumpkin.My booth is next to the watermelon vendor's booth.
The verb in the sentence is are taking.
is scheduled is a passive verb phrase
Sat is the verb in that sentence.
a verb. He implies there may be a test next week. "He" is the subject "implies" is the verb
The verb is "hit" and the verb phrase is "will hit."
The verb is "hit" and the verb phrase is "will hit."
The verb is "hit" and the verb phrase is "will hit."
The verb is "hit" and the verb phrase is "will hit."