Yes, says is the third person singular conjugation of say.
The word "says" does not have an apostrophe in its standard form. It is a present tense verb that does not require an apostrophe.
No, says does not need an apostrophe. It's the present tense third person singular conjugation of the verb "say".
The verb for this word is reside which means to live.
yes. In the book 501 English verbs, it says that 'to yes' is a verb
To do. A deed (noun) is something you do (verb).
Yes the word 'says' is a verb.
A verb
The word "says" does not have an apostrophe in its standard form. It is a present tense verb that does not require an apostrophe.
The word say is a verb.
No, says does not need an apostrophe. It's the present tense third person singular conjugation of the verb "say".
No, the word 'will' is a verb (or auxiliary verb) and a noun.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Examples:If Jack says he will do it. Hewill. (The pronouns 'he' take the place of the noun 'Jack'; auxiliary verb 'will do' and verb 'will')Jack's will to succeed is very strong. (the noun 'will')
Yes it is an action verb.
The "predicate" of the sentence is the verb that describes the act of the subject.
The phoenix attacked my grandpa or so he says
It can be a verb or a noun. It depends on how you use it. If someone says "I will murder him," than it's a verb, but if I say "Did we just wittnes a murder," than the verb would be wittnes and murder would be a noun.
It means you own it. If someone says raise your hand. your hand is a possessive verb.
An adverb is a word that says something about a verb, e.g. shopping. In the sentence "He shops frequently," frequently says something about the frequency of shopping and is therefore (already) an adverb.