No, you can see it when one person 'chases' after another.
The word chasing is a verb. (It is the present participle of "chase")
chase
Chase is a verb, ,so chases is one.
Chase = Jagd Pronounced 'Yagged' . That's the noun; the verb is 'jagen' - 'to chase'.
Seen is not an adverb, no.The word seen is a verb.
No, chase isn't an adjective. It is a verb, or a noun (pursuit). It can be used as an adjunct as in the movie term "chase scene."
The word chase is both a noun and a verb (chase, chases, chasing, chased). Example uses: As a noun: The chase to catch up with the bus left us breathless. As a verb: If you chase after him but he won't respect you.
"have seen" is the verb, and it is in the present perfect tense.
The verb is "to see" and the verb phrase is "had seen."
The word chases is a form of the verb "chase", an action verb meaning either to follow or to pursue.
In pronunciation, there are two words that sound alike : CHASED (verb) - past tense of the verb ''to chase'' CHASTE (adjective) - virginal, or austere
'Has seen' is the verb phrase.