In French, "go to a concert" is translated as "aller à un concert." The verb "aller" means "to go," and "un concert" means "a concert." You can use this phrase when expressing your intention to attend a musical event.
In the sentence, the modified verb is "developed," while "quickly" serves as the adverb modifying the verb. The phrase "part singing" acts as the direct object of the verb "developed." Thus, the sentence indicates that musicians efficiently created the practice of part singing during the Middle Ages.
The verb of song is sing. As in "to sing to something or someone".
singing is a form of the verb to singIt can also be a form of verbal called a gerund. A gerund is a verb used as a noun.For example, "Singing can improve your lung capacity"
It is not.
The verb phrase is "should have been."
should have been
"Is should be" is not a correct verb phrase in English grammar. "Is" is a linking verb and "should be" is a modal verb phrase. A correct verb phrase would be "is eating" or "is sleeping."
been washed. This is a passive verb phrase.
A verb phrase is the action, identity, or linking verb in a sentence, which may have a tense that includes a form of to be, to have, or to do. It may also include auxiliary verbs such as could, would, or might. Example: The boy goes to school. (verb - goes) The boy will be going to school. (verb phrase - will be going) The boy should have been going to school. (verb phrase - should have been going)
The verb phrase is 'should pry'. Not is an adverb.
No. That is only a helper verb and the subject of the sentence.A "verb phrase" has been used to mean the "predicate" of a sentence.But traditionally it means the "whole verb" including its helpers (e.g. "is going" or "had gone" or "should have been going").
The phrase "has been" is a verb phrase consisting of the auxiliary verbs "has" and "been." It is commonly used to show the continuous aspect or the perfect aspect of a verb.
Has been is the verb phrase. It's is a contraction for it has, and never is an adverb and not part of the verb phrase.
The verb phrase is "should have borrowed."
The verb phrase is should have borrowed (should have are helping verbs, and borrowed is the past participle of the main verb, borrow). The word not is an adverb and is not part of the verb phrase.
Should arrive is the verb phrase.