No. Let the police do that.
Yes it can be an adjective: We walked past the parked cars.
slow down
The past tense of "cite" is "cited."
The past participle is parked.
Verbs are only simple when in a sentence, with one verb.I parked the car outside the cinema.This is a past simple sentence. It has one verb in the past tense - parked
Verbs are only simple when in a sentence, with one verb.I parked the car outside the cinema.This is a past simple sentence. It has one verb in the past tense - parked
Some people incorrectly believe: "It is the parked car driver that is at fault because the car was parked past the sign." However, a parked car does not have the ability to see and avoid other cars; the drivers of the other cars are responsible for trying to avoid hitting any object that may be standing in the way, regardless of how it got there or whether it happens to be there legally. Could I legally crash into a parked car simply because it's time ran out on the parking meter? Parking laws rarely have anything to do with liability to other drivers who crash into each other. On the other hand, if the illegally parked car was violating a view to a intersection approach, and two OTHER cars collide "because of it", then the parking law COULD apply and may serve to apportion fault to the driver of the parked car who created the specific hazard against which the sign was posted, but most of the blame is on the other drivers who failed to exercise caution while driving. It still doesn't give someone the roght to drive into it.
The Vulcan neck pinch.
cars today have spinners and nitrous
I saw lots of cars drive past.
The past participle of "cuted" is simply "cut." "Cut" is both the past tense and past participle form of the verb "cut."
Seat belt and air bags.