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In the sentence, there is no linking verb. The easy way to recognize a linking verb is that a linking verb acts as an equals sign, the object is a different form of the subject (Mary is my sister. Mary=sister); or the subject becomes the object (My feet got wet. feet->wet). In the sentence, 'Where are the children?' (the children are where), the place where the children are is not another form of the subject children.
Yes, a sentence with a linking verb will often have a subject complement. The subject complement renames or describes the subject and is connected to it by the linking verb.
A linking sentence is a sentence to finish off a paragraph as well as starting the other paragraph.
"Is" is the linking verb in this sentence. All this means is that "is" is the verb and the type of verb is a linking verb.
The linking verb in that sentence is "seems".
The linking verb in the sentence is "became."
no because was is not a linking verb
The sentence in which the verb is a linking verb uses the verb to connect the subject of the verb to more information about the subject. The linking verb will not express an action.
by hitting you
There seems to be no evidence linking the two together.By linking the wires, we complete the circuit.
That part of the sentence is officially known as the predicate.
A linking verb is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence. An interrogative sentence is the only instance when a linking verb starts a sentence.Examples:Is Jack your brother? (Jack is brother)Was the movie good? (movie was good)