no its a preposition
No, "wanted" is not a linking verb. It is a verb that shows an action or a desire, rather than connecting the subject to a subject complement.
Yes, "put" can be a linking verb when it is used to indicate placement or location, as in "She put the book on the table."
As the definition states the subject complement follows either a linking verb or a pronoun. Therefore yes a sentence that contains a linking verb will also have a subject complement.
No, the word "cause" is not a linking verb. It is a transitive verb that shows an action or an effect that one thing has on another. Linking verbs connect the subject of a sentence to a subject complement, such as in "She is happy" where "is" is a linking verb.
"Is" can function as both a linking verb and an auxiliary verb. As a linking verb, it connects the subject of a sentence to a subject complement, typically describing a state of being. For example, in the sentence "He is happy," "is" is a linking verb connecting "he" to "happy."
"Did" is not a linking verb.
No. The verb to become is a linking verb, and the verb to be is a linking verb, but they are two separate verbs.
Yes it's a linking verb.
yes
yes
yes
Yes
Yes and no! Love is a stative verb, you can use it to do linking and action verb sentences.
Yes and no! Love is a stative verb, you can use it to do linking and action verb sentences.
Yes and no! Love is a stative verb, you can use it to do linking and action verb sentences.
Yes, a subject complement follows a linking verb and not an action verb.
No. Linking verbs are a form of "to be" such as am, is, are, was, were. Survive is an action verb.