My dictionary said plus is a noun, an adjective, a preposition and a conjunction but not a verb.
Circle the wagons!
The word prodigy is a noun, not a verb. My son is a prodigy.
Prodigious is not a verb, it is an adjective. You can tell just by looking at him that his ego is prodigious.
Both. It just matters how you use it in the sentence.
Being sad doesn`t match you.
I am an English professor. The subject is 'I'. The linking verb is 'am'. 'An English professor' is a noun acting as predicate noun.
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.
Subject plus verb and subject plus verb plus object are two of the five sentence patterns. The other patterns are subject plus verb plus complement, subject plus verb plus indirect and direct object, and subject plus verb plus object plus complement.
Difficult subjects came up and secretaries took notes.
Herb is a noun not a verb.
caca
No. One or the other is correct. We use can plus the infinitive without to: I can do that. But we use ablewith the copula verb ( to be, for example) and the infinitive with to. I am able to do that.
The complete verb in the sentence is "should use."
no you need a verb and a noun
You cannot since it is not a verb.
does is not a modal verb
The word "run" is a verb. Example sentence: She runs in the park every morning.