"Swum" is the past participle of "swim" (I swim today, I swam yesterday, I have swum there before).
I couldn't believe he had swum the English Channel at such a young age.
I swam across the lake yesterday.
swum
You would use 'me' in this case. You use 'I' when you are the subject of the sentence, and 'me' when you are the object of the sentence or the phrase, as in this case.Subject of sentence: I was going to get a picture.Object of phrase: I was going to get a picture of Kaeleah and me.Object of sentence: It was Kaeleah andme in the picture.
to seperate a sentence
Is would be the verb in the sentence.
What's the difficult sentence? ThAt would help.
It must be used after some form of have. He/she/it (has) swum. We/You/they (have) swum. Or having, as in: Having swum the length of the pool....
will have swum is the verb phrase.
will have swum is the verb phrase.
Acutally, it is an intransitive verb which needs a 'helping verb' such as have.......... A sentence using the word 'swum' could be: "I've swum to the island every day." The "'ve" stands for "have," a helping verb
While swam is the past tense of swim, swumis the past-perfect tense of swim. Swam would be used in the following sentence: "We swam down the river yesterday." Swum would be used in the following sentence: "We had swum down the river yesterday before going inside for dinner." =D
No. It isn't. Haven't you swum in the other pool yet? Answer: Although I don't like to disagree, and it's certainly true that in traditional written English we should say 'haven't you swum..', people do use 'you haven't swum..' with a rising intonation in spoken English to express surprise. The questioner may be asking about the declarative sentence 'You haven't swum in the other pool yet.' The question mark relates to the inquiry about grammar, and not necessarily to the function of the construct. As a declarative sentence, it is correct.
I assume your question is if this sentence is correct. It's not. :( Correct: He swam across the lake yesterday. Example of "had swum": "Before the day of the race, I had swum two miles every day." "Had swum" (or "had done anything") shows the action happened before a past action or event.
will have swum
swum as in I have swum the channel
infinitive: swimpast: swampast participle: swumPast Perfect is formed like this: had + past participlePast Perfect: had swum
Swum is the past participle of the verb "swim".
swum as in I have swum the channel