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A linking verb connects a subject to a subject complement that identifies or describes the subject.
Example | Explanation |
---|---|
The play is Waiting for Godot. | The linking verb is links the noun phrase the play to its subject complement Waiting for Godot, which identifies the subject. |
Some of us thought that the play was very good. | The verb was links the subject complement very good to the subject the play. |
Others thought it became tedious after the first fifteen minutes. | The linking verb became links the subject it to the subject complement tedious. The phrase after the first fifteen minutes functions as an adverb modifying the clause it became tedious. |
The cast appears disorganized and confused; perhaps Beckett intended this. | Appears functions as a linking verb that connects the subject the cast to its subject complement disorganized and confused. |
The play seems absurd to me. | The subject the play is joined to its subject complement absurd by the linking verb seems. |
Linking verbs are either verbs of sensation (feel, look, smell, sound, taste) or verbs of existence (appear, be, become, continue, grow, prove, remain, seem).
Many linking verbs (with the exception of be) can also be used as transitive or intransitive verbs. In the following pairs of sentences, the highlighted verb in the first sentence is a linking verb and in the second the same verb is a transitive verb.
The adjective terrible is a subject complement that describes a quality of the water.
Here the noun phrase the soup is the direct object of the verb tasted.
The phrase very squeaky is a subject complement that describes the nature of the singing voice.
Here the verb sounded takes a direct object, the noun phrase the alarm.
The adjective queasy is a subject complement that describes Cynthia.
Here the noun phrase the fabric of the coat is the direct object of the verb feels and identifies what the tailor feels.
© Department of English, Faculty of Arts, University of Ottawa, 2024