IDENTIFYING
VERBS
For example:
Sam finished
his homework in the library.
In this sentence ‘finished’ is the verb (it says what
Sam did with his homework in the past). ‘Sam’ is the subject of the sentence because the verb tells us what he did.
All sentences need a verb. Here are some examples:
Jenny reads the Metro on the
train every morning.
That bicycle belongs to me.
Two verbs are sometimes put together, especially with verbs like can, must, should.
I can see
the sea from my house.
You really must
see the new Bond film.
We can also use more than one word to form a tense:
We have been
driving for hours.
There can also be more than one verb in a sentence:
1. When a verb is followed by an infinitive (a
verb with no tense, usually after ‘to’):
The children didn’t
want to go home.
2. When a sentence has two subjects:
We’ll talk about
the party when Simon comes home.
(The two subjects are ‘We’ and ‘Simon’.)
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