ice skating
Loves is the verb in that sentence.
There is no linking verb in that sentence. The only verb, loves, is a transitive verb. The direct object of the transitive verb is "driving".
areIn this sentence skiing and skating are not verbs. They are gerunds = verbs acting like nouns
skating is the participle form of the verb "to skate"
Passive.The agent can be added = You are loved by your father.Passive is formed with be verb + past participle = are lovedThe active sentence is - Your father loves you.
Loves is the verb in that sentence.
There is no linking verb in that sentence. The only verb, loves, is a transitive verb. The direct object of the transitive verb is "driving".
areIn this sentence skiing and skating are not verbs. They are gerunds = verbs acting like nouns
skating is the participle form of the verb "to skate"
"Calling" is the verb.
In this sentence the word run the is verb. A verb is a word that tells something that has or is doing.
It should be "I love you." When conjugating the verb to love in the first person singular it becomes love and not loves.
She loves me. I love her. They love watching the Olympics on TV
No, 'loves' is the verb. In the sentence, 'Bob loves reading.' the subject is Bob. What is the action? Bob loves... The reason that the verb is confusing is that the object of the sentence 'reading' is a gerund, a verb that is acting as a noun. Reading is normally a verb but it is not the action in this sentence. It's not telling us that Bob is reading, it's telling us what Bob 'loves'.
Passive.The agent can be added = You are loved by your father.Passive is formed with be verb + past participle = are lovedThe active sentence is - Your father loves you.
The pronoun in the sentence, "He loves her." are:he, personal pronoun, third person, singular, subject of the sentence.her, personal pronoun, third person, singular, direct object of the verb 'loves'.
The phrase, "She loves reading." is a complete sentence; the parts of speech are:she; personal pronoun; subject of the sentenceloves; verb, third person, singular presentreading; gerund (verbal noun), direct object of the verb