Verbs: Verbs Express Action Occurrence State of Being
Verbs: Verbs Express Action Occurrence State of Being
Verbs tell what action a subject is performing Can show physical action (marched, mailed) Can show mental action or ownership (thought, has) Can show an occurrence (became) Can show a state of being (was)
Number of verbs
Verbs have number, which means they are singular (one) or plural (more than one). The number of a verb depends on the number of its subject.
Singular verbs
In 1963, the Berlin Wall stood as a new symbol of communisms strength. Today it stands in pieces as a new symbol of communisms weakness.
Notice that stands, with an s is singular.
Plural verbs
In 1963, two 10-year-old girls were pushed apart by the wall. Today, the 37-year-old women stand together on top of it.
Notice that stand, without an s is plural.
Person of a verb
Verbs differ in form depending upon the point of view or person of the pronoun being used with them.
First person (I) Second person (you) Third person (he, she, it)
Point of view
First Person singular I sniff First Person plural We sniff
Notice on packet page 65 the examples of second and third person.
Voice of a verb
The voice tells you whether the subject is doing the action or is receiving the action.
Tense of a verb
A verb has three principal parts: The present The past The past participle
The past and past participle of regular verbs are formed by adding ed to the present form.
My stomach tightens into a knot sometimes. My breaths are shorter, and my palms sweat.
Yesterday, my stomach tightened into a knot, and my palms perspired before the game.
take
Anxiety will visit you too some day, and he will be tough! But you will be tougher!
She has screamed at her friends many times and they have ignored it.
Then, last Friday at the Pizza Hut, they had eaten more than their share of the pizza, and she had called them greedy pigs.
By next Friday, she will have forgotten the pizza, but they will have remembered the name-calling.
Elmer was using super-strength, slow-drying glue. For 10 minutes he had been holding the two broken parts together. He should have bought a C-clamp for a glue job like this.
were
Transitive verbs
Verbs transfer their action to an object. An object must receive the action of a transitive verb for the meaning of the verb to be
complete.
Intransitive verbs
Intransitive verbs complete the action without an object.
Special verbs
Many verbs can be either transitive or intransitive.
Linking verbs
Links a subject to a noun or adjective in the predicate. Because it does not express an action, a linking verb is intransitive.
See your packet page 68 for examples of
Verbals
A word which is made from a verb, has the power of a verb, but acts as another part of speech.
Verbals can be gerunds, participles and
infinitives.
Gerund
A gerund is a verb form that ends in ing and is used as a noun.
Smoking rots your lungs. The noun smoking is the subject You should quit smoking. The noun smoking is the direct object.
Participle
A participle is a verb form ending in ing ed and it functions as an adjective.
or
Those kids digging for China are already tired. Those tired kids will probably lose interest before they make it. Digging and tired modify kids.
Infinitive
A verb form introduced by to; it may be used as a noun, adjective or adverb.
To scream in class was her secret wish. The noun to scream is the subject. But the last student to scream was sent away. To scream is an adjective modifying student.
Overwhelmed?
Verbs are tricky and you do not need to worry about knowing all forms for this class. Spend your efforts writing clearly and staying true to the verb tense that is most appropriate for your writing assignment.