you are bringing something... is an action so it is a verb...
"had brought" is the past perfect tense of the verb bring.
"Are brought" is the present tense of the verb "bring." It is used to describe actions or events happening currently or repeatedly in the present.
No, "brought" is not a linking verb. It is a past participle of the verb "bring" and can function as either a transitive verb or an auxiliary verb in certain verb forms.
The simple past tense of the verb "bring" is "brought."
The past tense with a helping verb of "bring" is "brought." For example, "I brought my lunch to work yesterday."
A pronoun can be the subject of a verb or the object and indirect object of a verb. Example: Subject: He brought his lunch today. (the pronoun he is the subject of the verb brought) Object: Mom brought me today. (the pronoun me is the object of the verb brought) Indirect object: He brought her some flowers. (the pronoun her is the indirect object of the verb brought)
brought is the action verb
Brought is a verb. It's the past tense and past participle of bring.
"had brought" is the past perfect tense of the verb bring.
"Are brought" is the present tense of the verb "bring." It is used to describe actions or events happening currently or repeatedly in the present.
No, "brought" is not a linking verb. It is a past participle of the verb "bring" and can function as either a transitive verb or an auxiliary verb in certain verb forms.
The simple past tense of the verb "bring" is "brought."
The past tense with a helping verb of "bring" is "brought." For example, "I brought my lunch to work yesterday."
No, "brought" is not a noun. It is the past participle form of the verb "bring."
"Was brought" is a verb phrase. The verb "was" is a past tense form of "to be," and "brought" is the past participle of the verb "bring." Together, they make up a passive voice construction in the past tense.
brought is the past of bring.we don't add -ed to bring to make the past - bringed. So bring is an irregular verb and brought is it's irregular past.
The future tense of the verb "brought" is "will bring." For example, "She will bring dessert to the party."