The verb of combination is combine.
other verbs are combines, combining and combined.
Some example sentences are:
"We will now combine these two chemicals".
"He combines the liquids".
"We are combining the living and dining room together",
"They have been combined".
Jack is a student. (the proper noun 'Jack' with the verb to be 'is')Jack is a student. (the verb to be 'is' with the common noun 'student')The children walk to school. (the common noun 'children' with the action verb 'walk')Jill can walk with them. (the proper noun 'Jill' with the auxiliary verb 'can')The children can't be late. (the common noun 'children' with the auxiliary verb-adverb contraction 'can't')
The verb forms are access, accesses, accessing, accessed. The verb access is an action verb (a verb for an act).
The auxiliary verb can is the closest verb to the noun ability.
The word bit is not a regular verb. It can be either a noun or a verb, and as a verb, it is an irregular form of the verb to bite.
A verb is an Action (Doing) word. 'How' in a sentence is a pronoun of question.
No. Who'll is a contraction of who will, which is a combination of a noun and verb.
Combine
Pronouns that take a plural verb are: we, you, they, and these; and any combination of singular pronouns will take a plural verb, such as 'You and I...'.
"Those'll" is a contraction combining "those" and "will." It is not a verb by itself, but a combination of a pronoun and a modal verb to show future action.
The term 'wait up' is a verb (wait) and adverb(up) combination.
"Who roamed" is not a verb phrase; it is a subject-verb combination where "who" is the subject and "roamed" is the verb. A verb phrase typically consists of a main verb along with auxiliary verbs or helping verbs.
The subject is "the game" and the verb is "was" "Be over" is considered to be a phrasal verb, which is a word combination that is formed by a verb and a particle. In this phrase "over" is the particle.
The verb form for the noun 'handshaking' is to shake hands (shakes hands, shaking hands, shook hands), a verb-object combination.
The word weren't is a contraction; a combination of the verb 'were' and the adverb 'not'. The contraction weren't functions as a verb (or auxiliary verb) in a sentence. Example:He was there to deal with it, you were not.Or:He was there to deal with it, you weren't.
Pronouns that take a plural verb are: we, you, they, and these; and any combination of singular pronouns will take a plural verb, such as 'You and I...'.
The word doesn't is a contraction, a shortened form for 'does not', a verb-adverb combination; the contraction is used as a verb or auxiliary verb. Example:This street doesn't go through to Broadway.
According to my wonderful English teacher (and my memory), "had been" is a verb phrase, but "had" is a helping verb.