Yes!!
no. ex- to hike. to means that it is a verb :D
The past participle is Hiked. Hike is a regular verb that doesn't change when it is in the past participle. You only must add Had. Example: Present: I hike in the woods Past: I hiked in the woods. Past participle: I had hiked in the woods.
The word hike can be used as a noun or a verb, depending on how it is used in a sentence.
It just change the tense
The addition of "ed" to "hike" changes the verb to its past tense form, indicating that the action of hiking occurred in the past. This indicates that the hiked took place previously or has been completed.
The "ed" in "hiked" changes the base word from "hike," which is a verb indicating the action of walking uphill, to past tense, showing that the action has already been completed.
Tina. 38 > 23 > 14 Tina > Dan > Marie
Hiked up e.g. I hiked up the mountain
The past tense is hiked.
No, I have not hiked the Grouse Mountain Grind trail.
It can be. It can be a noun for a direction, or a region (the Northwest),but when it modifies a noun, it is an adjective (e.g. northwest wind) and when it modifies a verb, it is an adverb (e.g. they hiked northwest, more properly northwestward).
I hike in the mountains several times a year. John used to hike until he suffered an injury. While hiking the startled couple encountered a grizzly bear and her cubs. When the helicopter crashed, the sole survivor hiked his way out of the woods. The price of the the train seats has been hiked by Rs 900.