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VERBS: Action, Linking, Helping: LLCC Learning Lab Verb Handout

This document defines and provides examples of three types of verbs: action verbs, linking verbs, and helping verbs. Action verbs show activity or movement and indicate what the subject is doing. Linking verbs connect the subject to words that describe or rename the subject and show no action. Helping verbs always appear with another verb to form the complete verb and indicate things like tense, voice, and mood. Common examples of each verb type are listed.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
47 views1 page

VERBS: Action, Linking, Helping: LLCC Learning Lab Verb Handout

This document defines and provides examples of three types of verbs: action verbs, linking verbs, and helping verbs. Action verbs show activity or movement and indicate what the subject is doing. Linking verbs connect the subject to words that describe or rename the subject and show no action. Helping verbs always appear with another verb to form the complete verb and indicate things like tense, voice, and mood. Common examples of each verb type are listed.

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Khaled
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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LLCC Learning Lab Verb Handout

VERBS: Action, Linking, Helping


A verb is one or more words telling what the subject does, how the subject exists, or how it links
the subject to another word that describes the subject. There are three forms of verbs:

1. Action Verbs: verbs that show activity, movement, thought, or process. They tell what
action the subject performs—what the subject is doing. To find the main action verb in a
sentence, ask: “What action does the subject perform? What is the subject doing?”

Example: The baby smiles at her parents.

2. Linking Verbs: verbs that connect (link) the subject to another word or words that
describe or rename the subject. Linking verbs show no action. They sometimes are called
“state of being” verbs.

Example: The coat feels rough and scratchy.

Common Linking Verbs (also includes all of their forms):


Forms of “to be” Senses Condition
am were look seem
is be sound appear
are being taste become
was been smell
feel

3. Helping Verbs: verbs that always appear with another verb (the main verb) to form the
“complete verb.” They indicate such things as tense, voice, mood, person, and number. A
sentence can have more than one helping verb.

Example: I should have taken the earlier flight to Chicago.

Common Helping Verbs (also includes all of their forms):


3 m’s “to do” “to have” “to be” rhyming words
may do have am were can shall will
might does has is be could should would
must did had are being
was been

REMEMBER: Do not include adverbs that may appear in between verbs as part of the
complete verb. These adverbs include:
not always sometimes never ever
often already just only

Examples (the complete verb is underlined):


He has never gone fishing with me.
She is not singing in choir this year.
I have just come home from the party.
My mom will only buy groceries at County Market.

lmyers 11/22/2013

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