Identify the Finite Verb and its type. "The building, as well as the classrooms of my school, is quite big."
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In English grammar, a finite verb is a form of a verb that (a) shows agreement with a subject and (b) is marked for tense. ... If there is just one verb in a sentence, that verb is finite. (Put another way, a finite verb can stand by itself in a sentence.) Finite verbs are sometimes called main verbs or tensed verbs
Verbs such as will, would, shall, should, might, must, ought to, could, and can are known as modal auxiliary verbs. Modal verbs do not change their tense, but when they are in a sentence, they are the finite verbs. There are no non-finite forms of modals because they are not parts of verb phrases.
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