It depends on how the word 'boys' is used. If it is a plural noun, then no. The boys chased the dog. If is is a singular possessive noun, then yes. The boy's dog chased him. If it is a plural possessive noun, then yes. The boys' dogs chased them.
The dog chased its tail. Its is the possessive but does not need an apostrophe. It's, with the apostrophe, means it is.
"The boy chased the dog" is a complete sentence. The verb, chased, is transitive. The object is "dog".
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.
One officer was busy subduing one criminal, while a second officer chased the other suspect.
pursuing, running after, following, hunting, tracking, trailing, drove away, shooed.
I chased her until she caught me. The dawn chased the night away. The cat chased the bird to no avail.
The word "purchased" has two syllables. It is pronounced as pur-chased.
The verb eg subject = dog verb = chased object = cat The dog chased the cat
The maniac chased me home.
chased
There are two syllables in the word chasing.
The predator chased after its prey.
It depends on how the word 'boys' is used. If it is a plural noun, then no. The boys chased the dog. If is is a singular possessive noun, then yes. The boy's dog chased him. If it is a plural possessive noun, then yes. The boys' dogs chased them.
The subject receives the action of the verb. The dog chased the cat. what was chased = the cat.
chased
The crotchety old man chased the kids out of his backyard.