Never isn't a verb, so a sentence with it as a verb would be grammatically incorrect.
Adverb. It modifies the verb. If something will "never" happen, it describes when something happen: never.
Five plus five is never equal to two.
two plus two will never equal five you asses
never A+ :))
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.
No, the word 'never' is not a verb; the word 'never' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb. Examples:We have never had a dog.He never saw the car coming.It never did that before.
Understand is the verb, never understand is the verb phrase.
Never is an adverb; it is not a verb, and therefore cannot be an auxiliary verb.
Never isn't a verb, so a sentence with it as a verb would be grammatically incorrect.
The verb phrase is "will understand" (the 'll is the contraction form)."Will understand" is the verb phrase. I'll is a contraction of I and will, never is an adverb.
Difficult subjects came up and secretaries took notes.
My dictionary said plus is a noun, an adjective, a preposition and a conjunction but not a verb.
verb phrase = could have moved (never is an adverb and not part of the verb phrase)The verb phrase in 'We could never have moved that tree by ourselves,' is 'have moved.'
The verb is 'have been', the adverb is 'never'.
The verb is - get on with = a phrasal verb.
"had never seen" is the verb phrase in the sentence. It consists of the main verb "seen" and the auxiliary verb "had" indicating past tense and a negative adverb "never."