It is the past tense of the verb 'to select'. However, it may also be used as an adjective, such as 'selected vegetables may be rich in vitamin C'.
"Select" or "selected" as the past tense.
A (adjective) selection (subject) of (preposition) cheeses (object of preposition) served (verb) with (preposition) grapes (object of preposition). For starters, 'A selection of cheeses served with grapes' is not a sentence, it is a phrase. A sentence requires a subject and a verb. While the word 'SERVED' is usually a verb, in this case it is being used to describe the cheeses, it does not indicate any action taking place. What happened with the selection of cheeses and grapes? If the phrase were rewritten: 'A selection of cheeses WAS served with grapes', then you would have an action. A selection of cheeses- is the subject of the sentence. was served- is the verb in the sentence, WAS is an auxiliary verb. with grapes - A prepositional phrase modifying the subject. - wjs1632 -
The word range can be a noun and a verb. The noun refers to a selection of something. The verb form means to travel over.
The word range can be a noun and a verb. The noun refers to a selection of something. The verb form means to travel over.
The noun forms for the verb to select are selector, selection, and the gerund, selecting.The noun form for the adjective select is selectness.
It can be used as an adjective, it is the past participle of the verb - to choose.
As a noun, verb, or adjective~ Please make your selection from the related link listed below:
The word 'selection' is a noun, a singular, common noun; a word for the process of choosing one person or thing from a group; the one that is selected.The verb forms are: select, selects, selecting, selected.The adjective forms are: select, selectable, selective, selecting, selected.The adverb form is: selectively.
This may be one of these homophones (sound-alike words). BROWSE - (verb) to look through, as with a selection BROWS - (noun) forehead areas
That is the correct spelling of the verb "to choose" (the past tense is chose).
disruptive selection
The three patterns of natural selection are directional selection, stabilizing selection, and disruptive selection. Directional selection favors individuals at one extreme of a trait distribution, stabilizing selection favors the intermediate phenotype, and disruptive selection favors individuals at both extremes of a trait distribution.