Verb (verb, abbreviated as V.) is one of the parts of speech, which is generally used to express action or state. In English, verbs are mainly divided into two categories according to their functions, one is predicate verbs and the other is non-predicate verbs.
In Chinese grammar, the actions or dynamic changes of people or things usually appear after nominal subjects or clauses. In English, verbs also change in tense and person.
Verbs are words that express the actions, existence and changes of people or things, such as? Walk, laugh, have, lie down, watch, write, fly, land, protect, start, wake up, and go up. ?
Summarized as follows:
Verbs usually act as the predicate of a sentence, or are followed by descriptive complements as the predicate center.
Represents the action, existence and change of the subject, or the action and attitude of the subject to the object. For example, "Here he comes." ("He has arrived") (intransitive, indicating the subject's dynamics) "We love our motherland" ("We love our motherland") (the subject follows the object, indicating the subject's attitude towards the object).
Verbs can be modified by adverbs "bu". Only a few verbs expressing psychological activities and some willing verbs can carry adverbs of degree, such as "I'm afraid of him", "I like him very much" and "I envy him very much".
Chinese verbs form multiple-choice questions in the form of "V not V". It is equivalent to "V or not" in English.