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Nope. its an action verb.
The verb in that sentence is "are".
You have a compound verb "will help" Belinda is your subject. "Will help" is your verb. "Us" is receiving the action of the verb, so "us" is your your direct object. Since "Will Help" has a direct object, it is a transitive verb. However, the verb "Will" simply puts the verb into the future tense. It is a helping verb. You could say it is intransitive. "Help" then serves as your transitive verb.
The noun forms for the verb to brighten are brightener and the gerund, brightening.
Been has the verb phase in this sentence. Verb is any action that is done.
Slippery is not a verb, it's an adjective. Slipperiest is the superlative form of slippery.
slippery NOPE! "Slippery" is an adjective, therefore it has no tense, past or otherwise "To slip" IS a verb, whose Past Tense is "slipped".
it can be, such as a slid car but primarily its a verb
The word 'town' is not a verb of any kind; the word 'town' is a noun, a word for a place. The word 'town' is also an adjective, a word to describe a noun, for example town government or town facilities.
Both. Rock is a type of music. A rock is also a part of the sediment of the earth. The verb to rock means to sway back and forth.
The word 'town' is a noun, a word for a place.
Yes, the word 'rock' is both a verb and a noun; examples: Verb: Don't rock the chair so hard that it hits the wall. Noun: I used a rock to hold the door open.
Town is a noun: 'I live in a small town called Topville.'Town can be used adjectivally: 'I like town life better than country life.'Town cannot be a verb.
standard verb usage is when you have a conjunction sentence without a verb or a regular sentence without a verb for example "Johny on a rock" but the sentence was suppose to be like this "Johny sat on a rock" now see? hope it works out for you! :)
Storm is the subject; blew is the verb.
No, it is an adjective. It is based on the noun rock.
The past tense of the verb "rock" is rocked - as in the sentence, "The band rocked!"