yes because she'll find out you posted this
upset: "I was upset." "He was upset." "He and I were both upset." "I upset him." ect
The past tense form of 'upset' is upset. There is no upsut or upsat. Its literally just 'upset'.
yes it is i feel really bad for you :(
I had an upset stomach. He upset me greatly.
Well honey, the comparative form of "upset" is "more upset" and the superlative form is "most upset." Now go ahead and use those in a sentence before I get more upset!
Hey I am very upset that it never came on either yet but it is delayed :( Its saying everywhere at 9th Jan but i cant see it on :S No point checking i tried everywhere :/
The base verb, the past and the past participle are all the same -- upset He upset the girls yesterday.
The word "upset" isn't a verb. You can be upset, but the verb would be "be." Therefore, "upset" can't have a tense.
"Jan" is the polish name for "John".
Jan. 1981 - Jan. 1989: Ronald Reagan Jan. 1989 - Jan. 1993: George H.W. Bush Jan. 1993 - Jan. 2001: Bill Clinton Jan. 2001 - Jan. 2009: George W. Bush Jan. 2009 - present: Barack Obama
BEcause she is upset
That is the correct spelling of "upset" (disturbed, or to disturb or spoil, e.g. upset his plans).