Every subject in a sentence must have at least one verb. But that doesn't mean that a subject can have only one verb. Some subjects are greedy as far as verbs go. A greedy subject can have two, three, four, or more verbs all to itself. When a subject has two or more verbs, you can say that the subject has a compound verb. Check out the following examples: Before mixing the ingredients for his world-famous cookies, Bobby swatted a fly buzzing around the kitchen. Bobby = subject; swatted = verb. Before mixing the ingredients for his world-famous cookies, Bobby swatted a fly buzzing around the kitchen and crushed a cockroach scurrying across the floor. Bobby = subject; swatted, crushed = compound verb. Before mixing the ingredients for his world-famous cookies, Bobby swatted a fly buzzing around the kitchen, crushed a cockroach scurrying across the floor, shooed the cat off the counter, picked his nose, scratched his armpit, licked his fingers, and sneezed. Bobby = subject; swatted, crushed, shooed, picked, scratched, licked, sneezed = compound verb.
No. The word to is a grammatical particle. It is used BESIDE a verb to form an infinitive, which a compound form of verb. For example: to see, to sleep, to go, to write, and so on. But the word to per se is not a verb.
Tenses of compound verbs include continuous, perfect, and future tense verbs. Compound verbs can also be passive, for example the verb in "a hamburger was eaten by John" is passive.
A complex sentence might have a compound verb in it when a subject has two or more verbs that interact with it in some manner. If the subject only has a single verb associated with it, it is not a compound verb.
"Is you have driven in the desert?" is an example of bad English. The correct sentence would read, "Have you driven in the desert?" That is the proper way of phrasing a question in English. It is a compound verb. The verb phrase is have driven, is a compound verb which is interrupted by the word "you." So in its correct form, yes it is an interrupted verb phrase. A question in English begins with a verb. Foreigners are confused by the use of the verb "do" in English. When there is a question but the verb is not compound, English uses the verb "do" when the sentence must begin with a verb. Instead of saying, "Know you him?" English says, "Do you know him?" In that case the term "do" is meaningless. It simply allows the sentence to start with a verb.
Yes, the word 'compound' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective.Examples:He lives in the cottage at the artists' compound. (noun)You will compound the problem if you lie about it. (verb)Soap is a compound mixture of ingredients. (adjective)
An example is: the dog has been barking all day. A compound verb is made up of an auxiliary verb and another verb. In the example, the compound has two auxiliaries, has and been, as well as the present participle verb barking.
An example is: the dog has been barking all day. A compound verb is made up of an auxiliary verb and another verb. In the example, the compound has two auxiliaries, has and been, as well as the present participle verb barking.
Tenses of compound verbs include continuous, perfect, and future tense verbs. Compound verbs can also be passive, for example the verb in "a hamburger was eaten by John" is passive.
Yes, 'was killed' is a compound verb. A compound verb consists of an auxiliary verb (was) and another verb (killed).
No it isn't a compound verb.
No, the word 'walk' is not a compound verb. A compound verb is made up of two or more words that act as a single verb, but 'walk' is a simple verb expressing an action on its own.
you can write compound wen you combine 2 words example: backpack: an object to keep your material back: a verb or a part of the body pack: a verb or an object to keep things.
No. The word to is a grammatical particle. It is used BESIDE a verb to form an infinitive, which a compound form of verb. For example: to see, to sleep, to go, to write, and so on. But the word to per se is not a verb.
Yes, shopping is an action verb; a verb for an act, not a verb for being.
No purchased is a verb, the past tense of purchase. compound noun is formed by two or more other nouns for example bus-stop.
No, "were held" is not a compound word. It is a verb phrase made up of the auxiliary verb "were" and the main verb "held."
Tenses of compound verbs include continuous, perfect, and future tense verbs. Compound verbs can also be passive, for example the verb in "a hamburger was eaten by John" is passive.