I have bought is the present perfect of the verb to buy.
I might have bought. I could have bought.
Yes, 'bought' is a past tense verb. "I bought the bread." Therefore, the bread is receiving the action of the verb, 'bought', as the direct object of the sentence. 'I' is the subject, performing the action, 'bought.' "The bought bread tasted good." This is a different way of phrasing "The bread was bought, and it tasted good. This shows that the sentence has a compound verb, and bought is not an adjective. Don't be fooled!
The word bought is a verb; the past participle, past tense of the verb to buy (buys, buying, bought).I bought a cake for the party.The past participle of a verb is also an adjective, a word to describe a noun.I didn't make the cake, it's a bought cake.
A verb that requires one or more objects. For example, 'he bought a car', so 'bought' is the transitive verb with the object 'car'.
Yes, "bought" is the past tense of the verb "buy." It is used to indicate that something was purchased in the past.
The word bought is a verb; the past participle, past tense of the verb to buy (buys, buying, bought).I bought a cake for the party.The past participle of a verb is also an adjective, a word to describe a noun.I didn't make the cake, it's a bought cake.
Buyed is not a word in any language. But the past tense of buy is bought not Buyed though.
The past tense is bought.
"Bought" is the past tense of the verb "to buy".
Is it bought
Bought is a verb. An adjective describes something. A verb is an action, or what you are doing. For example "I bought a new computer." The action is you buying the computer(bought). And the adjective would be "new" because it describes the computer.
"Dylan bought envelopes for Keisha when he was at the store."The noun envelopes is the direct object of the verb 'bought'.
You would use bought (past tense) because went is past tense. "He went to the store and bought strawberries for dessert."