No. People is a noun.
Example sentence: There were many people at the market.
change it first to: (Many people's favorite food is chocolate) so PEOPLE is the SUBJECTand since there is no proper verb, the VERB will be the helping verb IS
The word "people" can be used as a verb, meaning to populate, or to inhabit. But this is a rare use.
are - a present tense plural be verb
Yes. "Crowded" can be a verb (as in "People crowded the stadium") or an adjective. (as in "The stadium was crowded because of all the people.")
no. verb implies action "them" is a pronoun implying a group of people
Verb: Call
Like is the verb.
Found is the main verb.
No- a verb is an action such as, to go or to do (something)
wear is the action verb okay people
"Researchers" is not a verb; it is a plural noun referring to people who conduct research.
No, the word 'neighbourhood' is a noun, not a verb. Example: "The people of our neighbourhood are incredibly kind."