The noun forms for the verb attend are attendee, attendant, attendance, and the gerund, attending.
Attendance is a noun. Attend, attended, attending are verbs.
The noun forms for the verb attend are attendee, attendant, attendance, and the gerund, attending.Example: His attendance at school is not good.
no
Where did you attend college? (You did attend college where?)where - adverb, modifies the verb 'did attend';did - auxiliary verb;you - personal pronoun, subject of the sentence;attend - main verb;college - noun, direct object of the verb 'did attend'.
Attendee is a noun, not a verb. Only verbs have tenses. Attend is a verb, and the future tense is will attend.
To change the noun child to another noun, you can use a synonym such as "youth," "adolescent," "offspring," or "descendant."
What college did he attend? (He did attend what college?)what - interrogative pronoun, functioning as a determiner;college - noun, direct object of the verb 'did attend';did - auxiliary verb;he - personal pronoun, subject of the sentence;attend - main verb.
The noun 'changes' is the plural form for the noun 'change', a singular, common noun. The noun 'change' is an abstract noun as a word for an instance of making or becoming different, the act of replacing a thing with something else (a change of clothes). The noun 'change' is a concrete noun as a word for the money that you get back to you when you give more money than it costs to buy something. There is no plural form for this use of the noun change.
Command is a noun
Aaron plans to attend college once he completes this workbook?
Attendant is not a verb: it is a noun or an adjective Noun: someone who attends (e.g. parking attendant) Adjective: in attendance, present (e.g. attendant dignitaries, attendant risks) The verb is "to attend" and the simple conjugations are: Present: I /you attend, he/she attends Past: I/you/he/we attended Future: I/we shall attend, you/he/they will attend (shall is seldom used informally)
change competitor into a noun by adding a suffix