You would use an adverb. The sentence would read, "he is gentlemanly."
Use and adjective
An alien ran down the street.
Without a verb, you would just have a jumble of words. The verb conveys the meaning of the sentence, or the association of the words to each other.For instance, your question has the compound verb "do need." Without that, no one would understand what "Why sentences a verb" means.
WOULD you go to the mall with me? (the verb is 'would go'; the auxiliary verb 'would' expressing future action for the main verb 'go')
The word wouldn't is a contraction for 'would not', a verb or an auxiliary verb. Example sentence:She would not go out without putting on some makeup. OR She wouldn't go out without putting on some makeup.
No. In a sentence like "He was a consummate gentleman" it means he was a perfect gentleman. As a verb, when saying "We will consummate the deal tomorrow" it has no connotation.
The plural form of gentleman is gentlemen.
The word would is a verb. An example sentence using the word would is, Jill would never go to the beach.
"Leaped" would be considered a verb. "Leaped" without the suffix (-ed) would be "leap" (to jump or to hop), which is a verb (an action word or state-of-being). I hope this helped!
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.
which is not a verb
Yes, it is possible to have a sentence with a verb and without a helping verb. For example, "He runs every day" is a sentence that contains the verb "runs" without a helping verb.