The correct singular third person conjugation of the verb "to be" in the future perfect tense is "will have been."
The singular form of "choose" is "chooses."
The present singular of "choose" is "chooses."
The public is correct. plural and singular verbs can be tricky... but you use a singular verb with a singular noun, and a plural verb with a plural noun. For example: The person (singular) is (singular) correct. The people (plural) are (plural) correct. For your example, we need to decide whether "public" is singular or plural. Although a public is made up of many people, the word itself is singular. Therefore, the correct choice is: The public is correct. Both forms are correct. The word 'public', though singular in form, can be either singular or plural in meaning, depending on context. Many English collective nouns share that characteristic. It is possible to think of 'the public' as an anonymous mass (singular, taking a singular form of the verb), or as a number of individuals (plural, taking a plural form of the verb). Take advantage of the English language's wonderful capacity for subtlety and nuance, and choose the form that best expresses what you want to say.
The past perfect tense of "choose" is "had chosen."
Choisir is 'to choose' in English. Link goes to conjugation for 'choisir'.
The singular form of "choose" is "chooses."
That depends on where you happen to be from: In the US, collective nouns typically take the singular. Everywhere else where English is spoken, collective nouns take the plural. Ask yourself if "the faculty" is an it or a they then choose the verb's conjugation accordingly.
The present singular of "choose" is "chooses."
The public is correct. plural and singular verbs can be tricky... but you use a singular verb with a singular noun, and a plural verb with a plural noun. For example: The person (singular) is (singular) correct. The people (plural) are (plural) correct. For your example, we need to decide whether "public" is singular or plural. Although a public is made up of many people, the word itself is singular. Therefore, the correct choice is: The public is correct. Both forms are correct. The word 'public', though singular in form, can be either singular or plural in meaning, depending on context. Many English collective nouns share that characteristic. It is possible to think of 'the public' as an anonymous mass (singular, taking a singular form of the verb), or as a number of individuals (plural, taking a plural form of the verb). Take advantage of the English language's wonderful capacity for subtlety and nuance, and choose the form that best expresses what you want to say.
The past perfect tense of "choose" is "had chosen."
No, it is not. Chose is a verb: the simple past tense conjugation of the verb to choose.
Choisir is 'to choose' in English. Link goes to conjugation for 'choisir'.
The singular version of don't give anything is 'la singular forma de "hacer n ' t dan nada"'.
chose/choose(s)/will choose
Yes, the correct spelling is "choose."
Yes, if it is the infinitive of the verb (to choose). The past tense is spelled chose and the past participle is chosen. The verb "choose" is also a homophone of the verb conjugation "chews" (bites on).
The present perfect tense of "choose" is "have chosen" or "has chosen." For example, "I have chosen" or "She has chosen."