Yes, it is a verb, or at least a type of verb. Experienced is a linking verb.
A verb is an action word. 'He' is a pronoun. There are no verb variations for 'he'.
The verb
Got is an irregular verb. It is the past tense verb of "get".
Stealth has no verb.
The word recommend is a verb. It means to represent or suggest favorably.
Recommend is something you do, which makes it an "action".
Grammatically, you are right to say a verb takes an object to form part of a complete sentence. In your example, " The doctor " is the subject, " recommended " is the verb whereas " you to drink water " is the noun clause, which incidentally includes the infinitive " to drink water ", of the verb " recommended ".
No, it is not a conjunction. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb to recommend. It can be a verb or an adjective.
The word recommended is a verb. It is the past tense of recommend.
Yes, a predicate is the verb and all of the words related to that verb that follow the verb; there can be more than one predicate in a sentence. The words related the verb included in the predicate can be a noun or nouns. Examples:This restaurant was recommended by my sister. ('was recommended by my sister' is the complete predicate, 'sister' is a noun)The Browns live on this street. ('live on this street is the complete predicate, 'street' is a noun)
Recommended is the past tense form of the verb recommend. It is synonymous with suggest. In a sentence it would look like "I recommended he take up soccer." or "I recommended that we turn down the air conditioning so we don't freeze."
The word advice, meaning "a recommended opinion" is a noun; an common, abstract, uncountable noun, a word for a thing. The verb form is to advise.
Subject + transitive verb + direct object. examples: Hillary loves Bill. Rahm cooked dinner. Barack chose his advisors. The newly elected president recommended an economic plan. It's just S-V-O word order. A transitive verb is a verb that takes an object.
The past tense of recommend is recommended.
The word shouldn't is a contraction, a shortened form of the verb 'should' and the adverb 'not'. The contractions shouldn't functions as a verb or an auxiliary verb in a sentence.Examples:You should not leave your dishes for someone else to clean up.You shouldn't leave your dishes for someone else to clean up.
No. It is two auxilary verbs. "Should" is a modal auxilary, and "have" is the auxilary used to make the perfect aspect. "Should have" can be used with linking verbs (he should have been happy) or with action verbs (he should have driven), but is itself neither.