A subject complement is what works with linking verbs and completes a sentence. Subject complements provide more information about the subject in a sentence and can come in the form of a noun, pronoun, or adjective. They help to further describe or identify the subject in relation to the linking verb.
No, the verb "works" an action verb.A linking verb is a verb that functions as an equal sign, the subject is or becomes the object. Examples:He is the owner of the gas station. (he = owner)He became a mechanic in his teens. (he = mechanic)
A verb phrase consists of a main verb and any auxiliary (helping) verbs that come before or after it. This combination of verbs works together to express the action or state of being in a sentence.
In English, most verbs add "-s" or "-es" to the base form for present tense, depending on the subject: "he/she/it" verbs usually end in "-s" (e.g. "works"), while other subjects end in the base form (e.g. "work"). There are also irregular verbs with unique present tense forms (e.g. "am" for "to be").
The verb "works" is intransitive in the sentence provided. It does not have a direct object receiving the action.
Yes, you should always punctuate a sentence that ends with a citation in a works cited. Use the appropriate punctuation mark (usually a period) to end the sentence before the citation.
Think about it. He works at a gas station He has walked to work from his house. Which one of those sounds like it is LINKING two things together? you can get it- I bet you could've gotten the answer to that far faster than typing it into a computer, to have other people do it for you.
No, the verb "works" an action verb.A linking verb is a verb that functions as an equal sign, the subject is or becomes the object. Examples:He is the owner of the gas station. (he = owner)He became a mechanic in his teens. (he = mechanic)
Yes, but it really only works with verbs. For example... "Run!" "Stop!"
The answer is C.In question A: "works" would be the verb, but it is an action verb.In question B: "has" and "walked" would be the verbs. "Has" is a helping verb and "walked is an action verb.In question C: "are" is the verb, and it is a linking verb.In question D: "pays" is the verb, but it is an action verb.
There is no predicate nominative in that sentence. A predicate nominative follows a linking verb. "has given" is a transitive verb.
The function of subjective complements is to follow the linking verb with a predictive expression. It also works to complement the subject of the sentence.
A verb phrase consists of a main verb and any auxiliary (helping) verbs that come before or after it. This combination of verbs works together to express the action or state of being in a sentence.
Verbs tenses, speaking the works correctly, grammer
Yes, the word works. The word is an action performed by the subject Mary. Mary works every day
The government does public works
There's a switch on the brake pedal that when you step on it, it completes the circuit for lighting up the brake light.
I don't know a sentence for indebtedness. IT WORKS!