No, "flies" is not a past tense verb; it is the plural form of the noun "fly" or the third person singular form of the verb "fly" in present tense. The past tense of "fly" is "flew."
going to hit
'The kite flies around her face' is a sentence not a verb.The verb in this sentence is flies. The past form of flies is flew.The kite flew around her face.
Flies is a verb. It describes an action. It can be a noun referring to insects.
Flying, or Flies.
Yes the word flies is the plural noun of fly. Flies is also the present tense of the verb to fly.
The future tense of the verb "flies" is "fly," as in "he will fly," "she will fly," etc.
I fly, he/she flies
Sees A singular verb has the form - verb + s. walk does not have + s shirts has + s but it is not a verb it is a noun. fly is a verb but it does not have + s sees is a verb it is see + s
Neither is a singular verb.A verb with a singular subject has the form verb+s.She walks to work. - walks is the singular form of walk.The doctor flies to Spain every year. flies is the singular form of fly.
Flies is the present tense third person of fly.He flies to work in London.The past of fly is flew.He flew to London yesterday.
"Flies" (the insects) in Spanish is "las moscas" "Flies" (as by aeroplane, or a bird) is "vuela" (=he/she/it flies) from the Spanish verb "volar"