The word completed can be an adjective (e.g. the completed form) or a verb. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb 'to complete.'
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The word completed can be an adjective (e.g. the completed form) or a verb. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb 'to complete.'
Tug is another powerful verb for pull
Powerful
Completed is a past tense verb.
The verb phrase "will have completed" is in the future perfect tense. It indicates an action that will be completed in the future before a specified time.
Had completed is correct. This is a past perfect verb phrase. They had completed the test before the afternoon.
Future perfect apex }liljay
is powerful a noun or verb
Complete is a regular verb so add ed to make the past tensecompleted
it can be an adjective (i.e. "She was a complete mess.") or a verb ("I completed the task.")
The word competed is a verb, the past tense of compete.If you meant to say completed, then it can be either a verb, past tense of complete, or it can be and adjective. for instance 'the completed puzzle ' . both competed and completed are not adverbs because they do not describe a verb. however if you used completely, then that is an adverb because it could describe a verb.
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