In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
Ran is the action verb of this sentence.
I have been wondering what my future will be like.Many in the crowd were wondering why the candidate had not yet arrived.
The phrase, "have you not woke up yet?" can be considered correct, but it sounds odd. It would sound better being said simply as "have you woke up yet?"
The correct phrase is "not yet home." In this construction, "yet" functions as an adverb indicating that the action of being home has not occurred up to the present moment. Placing "yet" after "home" would be redundant and disrupt the standard English syntax.
"has arrived" is the verb phrase in "has my brother arrived yet".
"Has arrived" is the verb phrase in the given sentence "Has your brother arrived yet".
"Has arrived" is the verb phrase in the sentence.
The verb is has arrived.
Yes, "arrived" is the verb in the sentence "Has your brother arrived yet?" It indicates the action of your brother reaching a particular destination or completing a journey.
The verb phrase "have not yet visited the White House" is an uninterrupted verb phrase, as it is not separated by any other words.
No, the word 'yet' is an adverb, a word that modifies a verb and a conjunction, a word that joins two parts of a sentence. Example uses:Adverb: The package hasn't arrived yet.Conjunction: He wanted it yet he let his sister have it.
The correct phrase is "have not yet," where "yet" is placed after the verb "have" to indicate that something has not happened up to the present moment.
He has his invitation but he has not yet arrived.
He has his invitation but he has not yet arrived.
The cast of Home Not Yet Arrived - 2010 includes: Toby Lin as himself
No. In this question we can see who will do the action of the verb clean = they. In passive sentences and questions the doer of he verb is not always stated. A question could be: Has the swimming pool been cleaned. Notice also that the verb phrase is be + past participle. This is the passive form. In your question the verb is cleaned. (no be verb).