English, asked by satyam8073, 6 months ago

A group of words that have a subject and a finite verb and act as a noun in a sentence is a . .​

Answers

Answered by shomekeyaroy79
2

Finite verbs

Finite verbs Finite verbs are sometimes called main verbs or tensed verbs. A finite clause is a word group that contains a finite verb form as its central element. "The reason finite verbs are so important is their unique ability to act as the sentence-root.

Answered by Sanav1106
0

A group of words that have a subject and a finite verb and act like a noun in a sentence is a finite clause.

  • A clause is a group of words that contain a subject and verb and adds some details to the sentence.
  • Clauses are of many types and they can act as nouns in many sentences. For example, the noun clause.
  • Similarly, a finite clause contains a subject and a finite verb and can act as a noun. For example, I have done software engineering. Here, 'engineering' is a verb but software engineering has been used as a noun.

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