The verb phrase in the sentence is "take the bus."
The verb phrase in the sentence "They can take the bus to school" is "can take." This phrase consists of the modal verb "can" and the main verb "take," together expressing the ability or possibility of taking the bus.
The verb in that phrase is the word "Take". A verb is an action, and in this phrease the action being suggested is to "take" the bus.
A verb phrase is the verb and its dependents (objects, complements, and other modifiers), but not the subject or its dependents.The verb phrase in the sentence is "ran to the bus stop after the movie".The subject is the noun phrase "the children".Note: The preposition phrase "After the movie" modifies the verb "ran".
"The children were running to the bus stop." The verb phrase is "were running."
In this sentence, "were running" is the verb phrase, in the past continuous tense.
Should arrive is the verb phrase.
The verb is: are interestedThe verb phrase is: are interested in school politics
No, "joined our school" is a verb phrase, not an adverbial phrase. An adverbial phrase provides information about the action of the verb, such as when, where, how, or why something is happening.
It can be, yes. You can "bus" a table, which means to clean it off and get it ready for the next people. Or you can "bus" students to school, which has them riding to school in the noun version of bus. :)
The verb "is" in "is hijacked" indicates present tense. The verb phrase "has been" is the past tense.
"Is getting" is the verb phrase in the sentence.