left
became is a state verb
impatient is an adjective
angrily is an adverb
became is a state verb. Left is the action verb.
In the sentence, Dara became impatient and left the restaurant, there are two verbs, became and left. Left is the more active of the two verbs. One might argue that becoming impatient is not actually an action. Become is a state verb.
The word impatient is not a verb, it is an adjective. Fred is an impatient man.
Impatient is not a verb at all. It is an adjective.
In the sentence, the adverb is "angrily." It describes how Vera yelled at her cousin, modifying the verb "yelled" to indicate the manner in which the action was performed. Adverbs often provide context about how, when, where, or to what extent an action occurs.
In the sentence "Mr. Hernandez angrily broke his new pencil," "Mr." is a noun (title), "Hernandez" is a proper noun, "angrily" is an adverb, "broke" is a verb, "his" is a possessive pronoun, "new" is an adjective, and "pencil" is a common noun. Each word serves to provide specific information about the action and the subject.
No, the word 'angrily' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb: She spoke angrily. He angrily slammed the door.An adverb can modify a verb, an adjective, and another adverb.The verb is to anger (angers, angering, angered). The word anger is also a noun.
Impatient is an adjective. Only action verbs can be transitive or intransitive.
This sentence is a present simple sentence.As a present simple sentence it would mean this (work at the restaurant) is something 'they' do again and again.If the sentence was past simple - They worked at the restaurant at the weekend - then it would mean this action (worked at the restaurant ) is finished, completed.
(Apex) "I became impatient at her repeated attempts and, seizing the new doll, I dashed it upon the floor."
No it doesn't have a tense as it's not a verb. It's an adverb.
An indirect object is a noun or a pronoun that indicates to whom (or what) or for whom (or what) the action of a verb is performed. In this case, the verb is "had," so we see the restaurant had. What did it have? Burritos. Where were the burritos? On the menu. So in this sentence, "menu" is the indirect object. Also, for extra credit, "on the menu" is a prepositional phrase.