The verb divine (divines, divining, divined) is to appear to know something by intuition or guesswork, to guess; to locate underground water or minerals by use of a divining rod. Example sentence:
"No one knows the contents of these envelopes, but you, in your borderline mystical way, will divine the answers having never before seen the questions."
This dictator thought he had the divine right to rule his country, obviously everyone else did not.
does is not a modal verb
mandate can be a verb or a noun
Has would be the correct verb to use.
The subject is often near the start of a sentence: it is the thing or person that the sentence is about, and for an action verb, it is the thing or person performing the action. The verb is the action or state described in the sentence: what the subject does or is.
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.
This cup of tea is jolly divine.It was divine intervention.She looks pleasantly divine today.
Angels are a divine beings who help those in need.
Herb is a noun not a verb.
the divine right of kings were being patient with 500 people.
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The complete verb in the sentence is "should use."
This dictator thought he had the divine right to rule his country, obviously everyone else did not.
no you need a verb and a noun
You cannot since it is not a verb.
does is not a modal verb
The word "run" is a verb. Example sentence: She runs in the park every morning.