"Sits" is the present tense.
The verb "sit" has the following forms: sit (present), sat (past), and sitting (present participle).
I/You/We/They sit. He/She/It sits. The present participle is sitting.
The present tense of sit is "sits" (third person singular) and "sit" (for all other pronouns).
The present tense of "sit" is "sits" when referring to third person singular (he, she, it) and "sit" when referring to first person (I) or plural (we, you, they).
A King sits on a throne, and a ball is often thrown.
The verb "sit" has the following forms: sit (present), sat (past), and sitting (present participle).
I/You/We/They sit. He/She/It sits. The present participle is sitting.
The present tense of sit is "sits" (third person singular) and "sit" (for all other pronouns).
The present tense of "sit" is "sits" when referring to third person singular (he, she, it) and "sit" when referring to first person (I) or plural (we, you, they).
"Sat" is a verb, so it does not have a plural form. Sat is the past tense of sit. "Sits" is also not a plural, but it is another form of the verb.
He/she/it sits is the English equivalent of 'sedet'. It's the third person singular form of the present indicative tense. Other translations are 'He/she/it does sit, is sitting'.
'Sit' is a verb, so it does not have a plural form. The word 'sits' is not a plural, but rather, it is the present tense of the word 'sit'.
go 2 a doctor
thrown is the past participle of throw, while throne is the royal chair the king sits on.
The priest is the presider at Mass and sits in the larger chair. The smaller one is for the deacon if assigned to the parish, and is there whether or not he is present. For prayer services with no priest, the deacon sits in the presider chair.
every time he poops on the floor spray him/her until it sits on the toilet
Technical writing can read like its writer knows more than the reader. This denies the reader the dignity the reader has earned. To avoid this, a technical writer can write as though the writer sits at the reader's elbow offering kind guidance. The writer can write in the third-person, in the present tense and in an active voice. This can help the reader preserve his or her dignity.