"Has arrived" is the verb phrase in the sentence.
"Has arrived" is the verb phrase in the given sentence "Has your brother arrived yet".
"has arrived" is the verb phrase in "has my brother arrived yet".
Yes the verb was in the sentence it is arrived, the past tense of arrive
The verb phrase in the sentence is "are the cripple on the corner."
The verb phrase in the sentence is "take the bus."
"Has arrived" is the verb phrase in the given sentence "Has your brother arrived yet".
(A+) the sentence is (or should be) "Has my brother arrived yet?" the verb phrase is "has arrived"
"has arrived" is the verb phrase in "has my brother arrived yet".
Yes the verb was in the sentence it is arrived, the past tense of arrive
No, "Her brother's car" is not a sentence, it is a noun phrase; it has no verb. For example:Her brother's car is new. (the noun phrase is the subject of the verb 'is')She's driving her brother's car. (the noun phrase is the direct object of the verb 'driving')
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "could not see his brother in the fog".The subject is the noun "Tolbert".
The verb is has arrived.
The verb phrase in the sentence is "are the cripple on the corner."
This sentence has one verb phrase - had prepared - and one single verb - arrived.Had prepared is past perfect. It shows some thing that happened in the past before another thing that happened in the past - arrived - which is past simple.
"has always thought" is the verb phrase in this sentence.
The verb phrase in the sentence is "take the bus."
The verb phrase in this sentence is "were getting"