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Published byReynard Prosper Houston Modified over 6 years ago
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Verb: expresses action or links a subject & predicate
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Britta burnt her baked goods.
ACTION VERBS Fred found his folder. Rudolph wrote a riddle. Britta burnt her baked goods.
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LINKING VERBS Some form of the BE verb (am, are, is, was, were) or words like seems, appears, becomes, tastes, smells, looks, etc.
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LINKING VERBS Sam is silly. The soup smells good. Larry looks upset.
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HELPING VERBS Verbs attached the main verb to help show tense
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HELPING VERBS: am, are, is, was, were, be, being, been have, had, having do, does, did will, would can, could may, might, must shall, should
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HELPING VERBS: I am running late. He will have had four cups of coffee by now. We shall leave early. They were answering the question. You should have eaten that. I do believe you.
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TENSE-SHIFT TEST FOR VERBS:
Shift the word into either the past-tense or future-tense form. If the result is grammatical (and the meaning of the sentence has not been otherwise changed), then the word must be a verb.
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TENSE-SHIFT TEST FOR VERBS:
The chain is rusty. (Is “chain” a verb?) The chained is rusty. The will chain is rusty. Not a verb!
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TENSE-SHIFT TEST FOR VERBS:
We chain the dog every night. (Is “chain” a verb?) We chained the dog every night We will chain the dog every night VERB!
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