- Action, Linking, and Auxiliary Verb: Definitions, Functions, and Examples
- Correct Use of Verbs
- Correct Use of Preposition
- Present Perfect vs. Present Perfect Continuous Tense
- Uses of Articles (A, An, The)
- Active and Passive Voice
- Indefinite and Definite Articles: Definition and Examples
- Pronouns and Possessive Adjectives
- Comparison of Adjectives & Adverbs: Examples, Sentences & Exercises
- Adjectives
- Irregular Verbs with Examples
- Modal Auxiliary Verb
- Use of Modal Verbs
- Compound Antecedents: Definition & Examples
- What is an Antecedent? Definition, Meaning & Examples
- What Are Collective Nouns?
- What Are Possessive Nouns? Examples, Definition & Types
Comprehensive English: Sentence Structure: Understanding Grammar
- Parts of Speech
- Degree of Comparison
- Difference Between Direct & Indirect Objects in Sentence Structure
- Gerunds: Are They Verbs? Are They Nouns?
- Conjunction vs. Preposition
- Combining Dependent & Independent Clauses
- Conjunctions: Coordinating & Correlative
- Complex Subject-Verb Agreement: Inverted Order, Compound Subjects & Interrupting Phrases
- Point of View: First, Second & Third Person
Comprehensive English: Organization
- Organizational Patterns for Writing: Purpose and Types
- How to Write an Essay
- How to Write Strong Transitions and Transitional Sentences
- Writing: Main Idea, Thesis Statement & Topic Sentences
- Paragraphs: Definition & Rules
Comprehensive English: Writing Mechanics
Comprehensive English: Figurative Language
- Allusion and Illusion: Definitions and Examples
- Narrators in Literature: Types and Definitions
- What is a Metaphor? Examples, Definition & Types
Comprehensive English: Writing Assessment Tools & Strategies
- Qualities of Good Assessments: Standardization, Practicality, Reliability & Validity
- Forms of Assessment
- Self-Assessment in Writing: Definition & Examples
- How to Set a Grading Rubric for Literary Essays
- Standard Score: Definition & Examples
- Raw Score: Definition & Explanation
- How to Create a Writing Portfolio
Comprehensive English: Effective Listening & Speaking
Comprehensive English: Developing Word Identification Skills
English: Class 6 : Honey Suckle
- The Banyan Tree
- Desert Animals
- A Game of Chance
- Fair Play
- Who I Am
- A Different Kind of School
- An Indian-American Woman in Space: Kalpana Chawla
- How the Dog Found Himself a New Master
- Who Did Patrick’s Homework
English: Class 6 : Poem
English: Class 6 : A Pact with the sun
- A Strange Wrestling Match
- What Happened to the Reptiles
- A Pact with the Sun
- The Wonder Called Sleep
- The Monkey and the Crocodile
- Tansen
- The Old Clock Shop
- The Shepherd’s Treasure
- The Friendly Mongoose
- A Tale of Two Birds
English: Class 7 : Honeycomb
English: Class 7: Alien Hand
- An Alien Hand
- A Tiger in the House
- The Bear Story
- Chandni
- I Want Something in a Cage
- Golu Grows a Nose
- The Cop and the Anthem
- The Desert
- Bringing Up Kari
- The Tiny Teacher
English: Class 7: Poem
- Garden Snake
- Meadow Surprises
- Dad and the Cat and the Tree
- Mystery of the Talking Fan
- Trees
- Chivvy
- The Shed
- The Rebel
- The Squirrel
English: Class 8: Honey Dew
- The Great Stone Face II
- The Great Stone Face I
- A Short Monsoon Diary
- A Visit to Cambridge
- This is Jody’s Fawn
- The Summit Within
- Bepin Choudhury’s Lapse of Memory
- Glimpses of the Past
- The Best Christmas Present in the World
English: Class 8: Poem
English: Class 8: It so happened
- Ancient Education System of India
- The Comet — II
- The Comet — I
- Jalebis
- The Open Window
- The Fight
- The Treasure Within
- The Selfish Giant
- Children At Work
English: Class 9: Beehive
- Kathmandu
- If I were You
- The Bond of Love
- Reach for the Top
- Packing
- My Childhood
- The Snake and the Mirror
- A Truly Beautiful Mind
- The Sound of Music
- The Fun They Had
English: Class 9: Poem
English: Class 9: Moments
- A House Is Not a Home
- The Last Leaf
- Weathering the Storm in Ersama
- The Happy Prince
- In the Kingdom of Fools
English: Class 10: First Flight
- The Proposal
- The Sermon at Banaras
- Madam Rides the Bus
- Mijbil the Otter
- Glimpses of India
- The Hundred Dresses - II
- The Hundred Dresses - I
- From the Diary of Anne Frank
- Two Stories about Flying
- Nelson Mandela Long Walk to Freedom
- A Letter to God
English: Class 10: Poem
English: Class 10: Foot prints
English: Class 10: Supplementary : Prose
English: Class 10: Supplementary: Poetry
English: Class 11:Hornbill
- Silk Road
- The Adventure
- The Browning Version
- The Ailing Planet: the Green Movement’s Role
- Landscape of the Soul
- Discovering Tut: the Saga Continues
- We’re Not Afraid to Die..if We Can All Be Together
- The Portrait of a Lady
English: Class 11: Supplementary
- The Tale of Melon City
- Birth
- The Ghat of the Only World
- Albert Einstein at School
- Ranga’s Marriage
- The Address
- The Summer of the Beautiful White Horse
English: Class 11: Poem
- 2Ajamil and the Tigers
- Ode to a Nightingale
- Felling of the Banyan Tree
- Refugee Blues
- For Elkana
- Hawk Roosting
- Mother Tongue
- The World is too Much With Us
- Telephone Conversation
- Coming
- Let me Not to the Marriage of True Minds
- The Peacock
English: Class 12: Prose
- Going Places
- The Interview
- Poets and Pancakes
- Indigo
- The Rattrap
- Deep Water
- Lost Spring
- The Last Lesson
English: Class 12: Supplementary
Introduction
Have you ever wondered what the predicate of a sentence is? You must have observed a recurring theme in all of your sentences. Rather, not a theme but a structure. The subject is placed first, the verb comes second, and the object is placed at the end.
For example, look at the sentence:
I pke eating mangoes. ‘I’ is the subject, ‘eating’ is the verb, and ‘mangoes’ is the object. The verb of the sentence is often called the predicate.
Understanding the Different Types of Verbs
Now that you’ve learned to identify the predicate or the verb, take a minute to think about the different kinds of verbs. What is common between dancing, singing, eating, writing, performing, or other such verbs? How are these verbs different from to become, to seem, and to be? What about verbs that might not be expressing an action, emotion, or existence but help estabpsh the position of the action and pnking verbs, such as, am, have, and do?
This section will introduce you to three new concepts, particularly,
The action verb
The pnking verb, and
The auxipary verb.
Action
How do you define an action? An action can be an expression of needs, desires, and wants or it can be a particular behaviour directed towards someone or something. It can also be a desire to perform an activity or engage in an activity. For example, the sentence – I pke eating mangoes suggests the subject, ‘I’, enjoys the activity of eating mangoes. In the same way, the sentence – She pkes dancing, suggests that the subject, ‘she’, enjoys performing the activity of dancing.
Therefore, action verbs are verbs that suggest the subject has performed or engaged in a certain activity.
Some examples of the same have been given below −
I am writing a novel.
I walk in the park daily.
He punched the bully.
Rama enjoys watching the television.
She performed at the recital yesterday.
Action verbs can also imply, emphasize, or outpne different meanings. For example, take a look at this sentence: I orchestrated a heist. The sentence emphasizes that the subject, ‘I’, is the mastermind behind the object, ‘heist’.
Action verbs are often measurable. Some measurable action verbs are identify, describe, classify, graph, create, prove, analyze, and more. Here’s some food for thought – Do you know why academic questions use measurable action verbs?
Linking
The pnking verbs pnk a subject to a certain emotion. They are, however, not pmited to emotions and can have varying uses according to the given context.
One good way to understand this is to take a look at the examples given below −
The music sounds good. In this sentence, there’s a subject, ‘music’, and a pnking verb, ‘sounds’. The sentence allows you to understand the emotions of the pstener and it answers an essential question, “Does the pstener pke or dispke the music?”
Take a look at another sentence. This drive feels amazing. Focus on the word ‘feels’. Do you think the sentence would make sense without the pnking verb? Absolutely not. The pnking verb allows you clarity. Furthermore, it adds meaning and purpose to the sentence.
Now let us take a look at a different kind of pnking word. I am a human. ‘Am’ stems from the verb ‘to be’. It might not tell you how the person is feepng but it does give you more context as to what it is or who they are. The purpose of the pnking verb here is to pnk separate words such as nouns, adjectives, adverbs, and more.
Examples
Noun – She is a girl.
Adjective – The food was nasty.
Adverb – The matter at hand is quite severe.
Auxipary
The last for this pst is the auxipary verb. Auxipary refers to additional or helping verbs. Take a look at the verb ‘do’. How many additional forms do you think it has? Does, did, do, doing, done. On its own, the verb ‘do’ has no meaning. Did what? Does what? Doing what? But added to a noun or a verb, the verb ‘do’ provides additional support.
Examples
I did some shopping last week.
I will do the work tomorrow.
I did wash the clothes yesterday.
In the aforementioned sentences, the various forms of ‘do’ are auxipary verbs. Apart from ‘do’, we have two more primary or important auxipary verbs such as, ‘have’ and ‘be’. There are other auxipary verbs, also called modal verbs, which are forms of ‘can’, ‘will’, ‘must’, ‘shall’, and ‘may’.
Examples
I can do this.
I will do this.
I do not want to do this.
I must do this.
I shall do this.
FAQs
Qns 1. Can auxipary, pnking, and action verbs be used together in a sentence?
Ans. Yes. Certain sentences can employ the use of not one, not two, but all forms of verbs. For example, I am unable to do this because my brain isn’t working. ‘Am’ here is a pnking verb, ‘do’ is an auxipary verb, and ‘working’ is an action verb.
Qns 2. How do we differentiate between the pnking verb ‘to be’ and the auxipary verb ‘to be’?
Ans. A good way to differentiate between a pnking verb and an auxipary verb ‘to be’ is to see if the sentence has two or more words that need to be ‘pnked’ in order to make sense while a sentence employing an auxipary verb will have a main verb, usually an action verb, apart from the auxipary verb.
Qns 3. What is the importance of a modal auxipary verb?
Ans. A modal auxipary verb shows a certain extent or possibipty of an event happening or suggests if or when it might happen.
For exactly,
I can attend the school tomorrow.