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 :(
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 :/
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!
I had an upset stomach. He upset me greatly.
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).