Spoke can be a verb (past tense of speak) or a noun:
I spoke to the security officer about getting a temporary access card.
My bicycle wheel has a bent spoke.
"With a stutter" as it tells how he spoke and modifies the verb "spoke." An adverb phrase modifies a verb, adjective, or another adverb. An adverb tells how, when, or where about a verb. "Stutter" tells how about the verb "spoke."
The correct form would be "spoken." For example: "She has spoken to the manager about the issue."
The word spoke is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb speak.
'Notes confidently spoke family' is not a grammatical sentence. However, the verb is 'spoke'.
"Spoke" is a verb in the past tense form. It is the simple past tense of the verb "speak."
Spoke is the past tense of speak.If speak was a regular verb we would say speaked. But we say spoke therefore speak is an irregular verb
No, "spoke" is not an adverb. It is the past tense of the verb "speak." Adverbs typically describe verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs.
spoke is a transitive verb if the sentence contains a direct object for it. Example of transitive use: He spoke a few words of wisdom to the group. Intransitive: She spoke pleasantly to me.
No, "spoak" is not a recognized verb in the English language. It may be a typographical error or a slang term. Can you provide more context for further assistance?
Conversed.
Can be either:transitive: She spoke many carefully considered words.intransitive: He spoke indecisively.
The present tense of spoke is speak or speaking.