Fished, the past tense of "to fish", to catch a fish, is a verb.
Ex. "He fished with his father last week and caught a trout."
No, it is a verb, possibly an adjective. The word fished is a form of the verb to fish.
The present tense is fishing.
Yes, both the present participle and the past participle of a verb can be an adjective. Examples:Present participleverb: I like to go fishing with my father on weekends.adjective: We have a favorite fishing spot.Past participleverb: We fished together last weekend.adjective: We keep it a secret because we don't want it to become an over fished spot.
I fish therefore i am translated into Latin is ego expiscárí itaque ego esse The one above looks like some garbage from an on-line translator. It means 'I to fish for and so I to be.' Piscor ergo sum = I fish therefore I am.
fished I fished in the creek.
The past tense is fished.
Fished.As in: He fished the ball out of the river.
They fished in the Atlantic Ocean because they are closer to the Atlantic Ocean.
Another way of saying "fished out" is "TOOK OUT".Example in sentence is"Handbags were opened everywhere all over the room and notebooks were fished out."
Women grew corn while men fished
They fished, farmed and irrigated their land.
Nearly every fishery is over fished, commercial and Indian nets take extremely large number both in the US and all around the world. However, Japanese and US waters are some of the most overfished. Even Alaska is somewhat over fished.