Th e dance is on Friday. is is the verb. verbs describe action in a sentence.
*First off, that example would be two separate sentences. (There needs to be a period, comma and conjunction, or semi-colon after "Friday")Break Down of PartsSentence one: "The dance was on Friday."The= article. (Note: A, An, and The are articles, and they are found in the adjective family)dance= simple subjectwas= verbon= prepositionFriday= Object of the PrepositionSentence two: "It was fun."It= simple subject (Note: It is a pronoun, taking place of its antecedent, the dance.)was= verb, or linking verbfun= predicate adjective (Note: fun is an adjective, but due to the linking verb, fun is a predicate adjective describing it)*So, in simple terms, both "dance" and "it" are the simple subjects.
dance. whirling looks like it might be a verb but it is an adjective it describes the leaves.
depends what the sentence is.
Dance is a Noun.
Both "loves" and "to dance" are verbs.
depends what the sentence is.
The verb is dance and the past tense of dance is danced.
Dance with me, please!
*First off, that example would be two separate sentences. (There needs to be a period, comma and conjunction, or semi-colon after "Friday")Break Down of PartsSentence one: "The dance was on Friday."The= article. (Note: A, An, and The are articles, and they are found in the adjective family)dance= simple subjectwas= verbon= prepositionFriday= Object of the PrepositionSentence two: "It was fun."It= simple subject (Note: It is a pronoun, taking place of its antecedent, the dance.)was= verb, or linking verbfun= predicate adjective (Note: fun is an adjective, but due to the linking verb, fun is a predicate adjective describing it)*So, in simple terms, both "dance" and "it" are the simple subjects.
The verb in the sentence is "give." It is the action that the subject (you) is being asked to perform.
Sat is the verb in that sentence.
dance. whirling looks like it might be a verb but it is an adjective it describes the leaves.
depends what the sentence is.
The next sentence is a lie because it is not a sentence, it has no verb. So, the first sentence is also a lie because there is no 'next sentence'.
The verb tense is correct in the sentence: "She will be running in the race next weekend."
The tense of the verb "attend" is future tense.
The verb in the sentence is "flows." It is the action word that describes how each movement transitions smoothly into the next.