Possessive Nouns in English
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Learn how verbs work inside common English verbal phrases and how they change meaning in daily communication.
Verbal phrases are groups of words built around a verb.
They can show actions, states, plans, abilities, obligations, and results.
The main verb gives the basic meaning, while helping words add grammar meaning.
Some verbal phrases include prepositions, adverbs, infinitives, or gerunds.
Learning these patterns helps you speak and write more natural English.
The main verb is the most important verb in a verbal phrase. It tells the main action or state.
eat breakfast, drive a bus, study English, feel tiredMain verbs can be action verbs, such as go, make, and write, or state verbs, such as be, seem, and know.
Helping verbs work with a main verb to form tenses, questions, negatives, and emphasis.
| Helping Verb | Use | Example |
|---|---|---|
| be | continuous tense or passive voice | She is studying. / The door was opened. |
| do | questions, negatives, emphasis | Do you work? / I do not know. |
| have | perfect tenses | They have finished. |
Modal verbs add meaning such as ability, possibility, permission, advice, or obligation.
can, could, may, might, must, should, will, wouldAfter a modal verb, use the base form of the main verb.
A phrasal verb is made from a verb plus an adverb or preposition. The meaning is often different from the original verb.
| Phrasal Verb | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| look for | search | I am looking for my keys. |
| give up | stop trying | Do not give up. |
| turn on | start a machine or light | Please turn on the computer. |
Some verbs are commonly followed by an infinitive: to + base verb.
want to learn, need to work, plan to travel, hope to passThese phrases often show goals, plans, needs, or decisions.
Some verbs are commonly followed by a gerund: verb + -ing.
enjoy reading, avoid driving, finish working, practice speakingGerund phrases often name activities or actions as ideas.