Examples of 'verbs have' in a sentence

Meaning of "verbs have"

The phrase 'verbs have' is a grammatical concept that identifies the role of verbs in a sentence. It recognizes that verbs play an essential role as the main action or state in a sentence, conveying information about what the subject of the sentence is doing or experiencing

How to use "verbs have" in a sentence

Basic
Advanced
verbs have
Most verbs have six inflectional forms.
Both imperfective and perfective verbs have past imperfect.
Negative verbs have different tonal patterns.
The main difference between verbs and prepositions is that verbs have a subject.
Transitive verbs have two main characteristics.
There are also some properties that some but not all auxiliary verbs have.
Only imperfective verbs have an adverbial participle.
Verbs have active and passive voice.
Only imperfective verbs have a verbal noun.
Six verbs have this type of conjugation.
The present forms of perfective verbs have retained their future meaning.
Latin verbs have numerous conjugated forms.
In verbal interaction children learn that some syntactic differences between verbs have correspondent semantic differences.
No verbs have yet been identified for sure.
For me as a Bible scholar these two verbs have become inseparable.

See also

Some verbs have irregular forms.
There are exceptions, some verbs have only one form.
Many verbs have a common root.
In other languages, such as Spanish or French, verbs have a specific conditional inflection.
German verbs have a singular and a plural imperative.
In the indicative mood, verbs have up to seven tenses.
Polish verbs have the grammatical category of aspect.
Why do all the best verbs have to be irregular?
Verbs have three major conjugations.
Ditransitive verbs have three arguments.
Verbs have different conjugations depending on different situations.
Only imperfective verbs have a present active participle.
Verbs have both.
Only transitive verbs have a past passive participle.
Verbs have the most complex morphology of all the parts of speech.
Most of the modal verbs have more than one meaning.
Many verbs have strong or irregular forms which are distinctive from Standard English.
Dynamic and stative verbs are contrasted, as in Arabic, and verbs have several nominal forms.
The new verbs have slightly different meaning.
Like all Slavic languages, Interslavic verbs have grammatical aspect.
Mixtec verbs have no infinitive form.
Do either of those verbs have actors?
Hebrew verbs have much more internal structure.
Verbs Aspect ====Like all Slavic languages, Interslavic verbs have grammatical aspect.
And verbs have two voices.
Sentences with transitive verbs have subject-verb-object word order.
Gothic verbs have the most complex conjugation of any attested Germanic language.
As you see, some irregular verbs have the "-a" ending in infinitive.
Many verbs have a radical that does not change.
Both imperfective and perfective verbs have such tense there is no difference in their conjugation.
Verbs have intransitive, imperfect, and perfect marker.
Fourth conjugation, these verbs have a more or less irregular conjugation.
All verbs have negative forms, and many intransitive verbs also have derived transitive forms.
Except for this, modern Japanese verbs have the same form whether predicative or attributive.
Verbs have - Present tense.

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