Want this question answered?
Answer 1: In Freemasonry, the members, during meetings, wear aprons which resemble what stonemasons wear. The highest-ranking member in any given lodge is called the "Master," and his apron -- and those of certain other officers -- is a bit different from all the others. Once he is no longer the "Master" -- once he's a past-Master -- he gets yet another apron which indicates his having once held that high office.Many of the founding fathers of the United States were Freemasons; and many of them were Masters in their respective lodges. And so, many of them had portraits painted of them wearing their past-Master's aprons......which, no doubt, is what the questioner saw or read about somewhere, hence the question.For example (and this is but one), founding father, and first president of the United States, George Washington, was a Freemason; and many paintings -- some authorized, many not -- of him wearing his Masonic apron (a few of them his past-Masters apron) exist.
The past progressive (past continuous) is "was visiting." (were visiting) The past perfect progressive is "had been visiting."
An apron sink is a sink that has an exposed front. It extends past the front of the cabinet in which it is mounted.
The past tense of ride is rode. The past tense of visiting is visited.
The Past-Master - film - was created in 1970.
The duration of The Past-Master - film - is 1.08 hours.
A thrust stage is one that plays to the audience on three sides, sometimes it is called an apron stage because the definition of an apron is a part of the stage that extends past the proscenium arch - which a thrust stage does.
The past tense is mastered.
The past tense of visit is "visited"
Washington was given a Masonic service ( he was past master of the VA Masonic lodge and Grand Master of VA) while Martha watched from an upstairs window because she refused to attend the services.
No, the word 'visited' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to visit (visits, visiting, visited). The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Examples:verb: We visited Yellowstone on our vacation to California.adjective: The most visited attraction at Yellowstone is Old Faithful.
I was visitingWe were visitingYou were visitingHe/she was visitingThey were visiting