Posts Tagged ‘auxiliary verbs’

Verb denotes an occurrence, an action or a state of being. In this article, we will see about the types of verbs in English language.

Meaning of verb:

A verb is nothing but a word used to show that an action is taking place or to indicate the existence of a state or condition or the part of speech to which such a word belongs. Verb also denotes predicate of sentence (i.e.) the part of a clause or a sentence that includes the verb, but excludes the subject of the verb. On the basis of the language, a verb might vary in form based on sev... Read more...

1. Due to, owing to

owning to means ‘because of; due to means ’caused by’ and is always Effect after it follows a form of the verb ‘to be’: Her grey hairs were due to worry, but Owing to the snow, the train was canceled.

A clear rule is to use ‘due to’ after the verb ‘to be’ and either form else-here. But to repeat: He was late owing to traffic is correct; his lateness was due to traffic is correct, but the common He was late due to traffic is wrong even though it sounds right (substitute ’caused by’ here for ‘due to’ and you’ll get the point).

2. Farther, further

In a narrow sense, farther refers to additional distance, and further to additional time, amount, or abstract matters. But further is now often used for both time and distance. Farther, however, can only be used for distance, so you could say Is it much further, father?, or Is it much farther, father? The simplest solution is to use only further.

3. Flaunt, flout

Try to avoid mixing these up: flaunting is showing off, whereas flouting is defying co... Read more...

Auxiliary verbs exist to give additional syntactic information about the main verb by giving the sentence tense and / or mood. These auxiliary verbs are also more commonly known as helping verbs or linking verbs. In a clause that contains a finite verb you will find at least one auxiliary verb paired with the full or main verb. It will usually be found in front of the main verb and serve one or more functions such as passive, progressive, perfect, modal or dummy.

The main auxiliary verbs you will use are to have, to be, shall, will, may and can. However, these are not the only linking verbs you will encounter in everyday grammar. Some of the lesser used linking verbs are do, such as, ought, must, used, ought and dare. Some auxiliary verbs are created by linking into the different forms of clauses. These words are: am, is, are, shall, should, be, being, been, was, were, will, would, has, have, having, had, do, does, did, can, could, may, might, must, ought (to), get, got(ten).

When used in the passive voice the auxiliary verb is used to keep the clause ambiguous. In the sentence “The door was opened.” you ca... Read more...

To illuminate the meaning of a main verb tense we need to make sure that there is an understanding of each component involved. Sometimes breaking down a concept makes it easier to process.

What is a verb?
A Verb is a word that shows action or doing.
Examples: run, dream, smile, swim

What is a main verb?

Sentences may contain more than one verb. The main verb of a sentence is one which states the action of the subject.

Example: The dog is chewing on his toy.

In this sentence, dog is the subject.
Chewing is the main verb because it describes the action of the dog.
The word ,is, in this sentence serves as an auxiliary verb which will be discussed further.

What is tense?
Tense basically denotes past, present or future. Therefore the tense of the verb lets the reader know when something happened, is happening or is going to happen.
Example: The dog is chewing on his toy, informs us that he is currently chewing.

Putting it together:
The main verb tense tells us when the subject is doing whatever he or she is doing. Verbs have the ability to give us ... Read more...