yep! there really is no explanation just yep! :)
"Begging" is not a verb that can be applied to Earthquakes.
No.Applied is the past form of the verb apply:I applied the brakes but nothing happened.Or the past participle applied can be used as an adjective:applied physics, applied mathematics, etc
She applied for the job yesterday and was immediately hired.
No, Hydrogen is a gas. The verb "fly" can not be applied to a gas.
No. It is the adjective form of the verb "to rasp" (to scrape, to utter in a grating voice). In this case it is applied to a "coarse" voice.
"Applied" is typically the past tense of the verb "apply." So, it is used to refer to actions that occurred or were completed in the past.
Yes.
Past: applied Present: applying Future: will apply
Applied. The general principle is that if a verb ends in y, the y is changed to i in the past participle.
"Applied" is the past tense of the verb "apply." It is used to describe an action that occurred in the past.
No, it is an adjective usually applied to plants (tough, durable). It is related to the adjective hard.
Meticulous is not a verb, it is an adjective. She spends hours readying herself for a date. Her makeup is perfectly applied, not a hair is out of place, not a wrinkle on her clothing. She is meticulous about her appearance.