The linking verb "is."
The predicate is the verb and all of the words following the verb that relate to it. A sentence may have more than one predicate. The predicate answers what the subject is or what the subject does.
When there is more than one verb in a sentence, it is called a compound verb. Each verb in a compound verb has its own subject and contributes to the overall meaning of the sentence.
A simple sentence typically consists of one subject and one verb. For example, "She runs" has the subject 'she' and the verb 'runs'.
It can be either one; it depends on how you use it. "My blog is where I blog." <--That has subject and verb forms.
A sentence with a single finite verb is called a simple sentence.
The sentence "The book on the table is have many pictures" has an error in subject-verb agreement. The verb "have" should be replaced with "has" to match the singular subject "book."
Yes!!!
When there is more than one verb in a sentence, it is called a compound verb. This means that the sentence contains multiple actions or states combined with coordinating conjunctions like "and," "but," or "or."
The essential verb or verb phrase that cannot be left out of a sentence is called the main verb. It conveys the action or state of being of the subject in a sentence. Without the main verb, the sentence would be incomplete or nonsensical.
Time is a noun in the first sentence and a verb in the second one.
heard - is a past tense verb. Because there is only one verb in this sentence it is a simple tense = past simple
one possibility is the following - The man was acquitted when the prosecution could not provide any condemning evidence. acquitted is a verb, so place it after the subject, and it usually has a helping verb before it.