The verbs in this sentence are "is" and "seems."
There is no strong verb for play - played.
it is a linking verb. "Seems" "tastes" "smells" are all the same kind of verb, what one of my old teacher called "Wannabe Verbs", meaning they want to be a "Being Verb" (be, is, was, might be, etc. etc.) The soup seems good..... SEEMS is a Linking Verb to GOOD, which is the PREDICATE ADJECTIVE
The verb in the sentence "the hummingbird is very small" is "is." In this sentence, "is" is a linking verb that connects the subject "hummingbird" to the subject complement "very small." Linking verbs do not show action but instead link the subject to more information about it.
child, lunch, kitchen=noun very=adverb small,=adjective had eaten=verb in=preposition the=modifier
A vivid verb for the word had is possessed. Vivid verbs are verbs that are very descriptive and specific.
Because waves are very strong
No, the word 'will' is a verb (or auxiliary verb) and a noun.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Examples:If Jack says he will do it. Hewill. (The pronouns 'he' take the place of the noun 'Jack'; auxiliary verb 'will do' and verb 'will')Jack's will to succeed is very strong. (the noun 'will')
A very small effect having a greater side effect on a variable or an object may be termed as a strong correlation.
He is a fjord horse, a relatively small but very strong breed from Norway.
The masses involved are very small in this case.
Sea horses do in fact eat small shrimps! They also eat very small fish and plankton. They're not very picky, it seems, since they just eat anything that's small and living.
Not unless it was a very small, very sick, very wounded elephant. They are too big and too strong for a predator to mess with them.