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verbs

Verbs are a grammatical category that encodes actions, events, processes, or states. They are central to clauses, marking time and mode of expression across languages.

In many languages verbs inflect for tense, aspect, mood, voice, person, and number. English uses base forms

Verbs can be classified by syntactic behavior: transitive verbs take direct objects (eat an apple); intransitive

In usage, verbs interact with other elements to form phrases and participate in negation, question formation,

that
combine
with
auxiliary
verbs
to
express
tense
and
aspect;
examples:
walk,
walks,
walked,
walking;
be,
have
as
auxiliary
verbs
with
main
verbs.
Verbs
can
be
finite
(conjugated
to
show
tense
or
agreement)
or
non-finite
(infinitives,
participles,
gerunds).
do
not
(sleep);
ditransitive
take
two
objects
(give
someone
something).
They
also
have
voice:
active
vs
passive
(The
ball
was
thrown
by
Mary).
Mood:
indicative,
imperative,
subjunctive.
Aspect
contrasts
such
as
simple,
progressive,
perfect;
tense
markers
locate
events
in
time
(past,
present,
future).
Some
languages
have
modal
or
auxiliary
systems.
and
subordination.
They
form
the
core
of
predication
and
are
often
the
most
morphologically
complex
part
of
a
grammar.
Note
that
many
languages
have
rich
conjugation
systems,
while
some
rely
on
particles
or
affixes.