VERBS
Do you want to know where the action is? Verbs! Verbs are words that represent both external and internal actions (for example, run, jump, work) (love, think, consider). Without verbs, you can't do anything, feel anything, or even be anything.
Verbs, as the heart of sentences and clauses, show what the subject is doing or feeling, even if it is simply existing. Verbs are also the only type of word that is required to complete a sentence. Even nouns, which represent things, are not required in every sentence.
What is a verb?
Let's start with the fundamentals: What exactly is a verb? Verbs are words that describe physical or mental actions. Verbs such as be, become, and exist also describe a "state of being."
Salah sprints across the field, kicks the ball, and scores.
"I am the government." —Louis XIV, King of France
Some verbs can also function as "helper verbs," changing the tense of another verb. Similarly, with words like "not," these helper verbs can turn a positive statement into a negative one.
She's been jogging for a month and can already tell her stamina is improving.
"I'm not feeling well." —Spider-Man


