Own can be used as a verb, yes.
eg. Peter owns his house.
The word "has" is a verb. It is the present tense of have.
The verb "read" becomes its own past tense when rearranged to "dare."
First of all, it is "preposition" and no, "own" can either be a verb or an adjective. A preposition is a word that transitions into a prepositional phrase, such as "of", "to", "in", "for", "with" and "on".
The verb "read" becomes its own past tense, "read," by rearranging its letters.
No, "had gone" is not a verb on its own. "Had" is the past participle of the verb "to have" and "gone" is the past participle of the verb "to go." Together, they form the past perfect tense of the verb phrase "had gone."
It can be an adjective and a verb depending on the way it is used.
Owned is a past tense verb.
the verb in the sentence is has
No, own is a verb, and adjective as used in different cases. For example, one can say "I own a car." which is a verb. But, used as "He has his own book." it's an adjective.The noun forms for the verb to own are owner and the gerund, owning.The noun form for the adjective own is ownership.
Own is a verb.
The word "has" is a verb. It is the present tense of have.
Traveled is a main verb; it does have a meaning of its own and doesn't need to be supported by another verb.
yes it is
noun - This is not my own answer. verb - I didn't answer this myself
none an adjective is its own word, and adverb is its own word and a verb is basically the same as an adverb!!
A helping verb has no meaning on its own. The word want has a meaning, so it is not a helping verb.
In the sentence "An apartment has its own kitchen living room and bathroom" the verb is "has."