Taken is neither plural nor singular. It is a verbal. It is also known as a participle or past participle. It is not used as a verb by itself but with another verb. It requires a helping verb. The helping verb such as is or are determines if it is used as plural or single. You could say, "I am taken aback." "They were taken away." The first case was singular. The second case was plural.
gangia(n) (pluaral/singular)
No, "has" is a singular verb.
Is is a present tense singular be verb.A verb by itself cannot be passive. The passive is formed this way:be verb + past participle.Is can be used to make a passive verb phrase.A sample is taken every hour. - is taken = be verb + past participle
A singular subject always has a singular verb.
It would help if you gave more context, but the German verb for "to study" is studieren. I study = ich studiere You (singular, informal) study = du studierst He/she/it studies = er/sie/es studiert We study = wir studieren You (pluaral informal) = Ihr studiert They study = sie studieren You (singular/plural formal) = Sie studieren
As an auxiliary verb will is without number: He will go; they will go. As a main verb, it may be singular or plural: I will this to my heirs; they will it to their heirs.
Yes, it is. It is conjugated with He, She or It.
A verb of being = singular past tense be verb.
doves
A singular subject has a singular verb form.He/ she/ it/ and singular noun subjects like the boy/ my brother are singular subject and the verb form for singular subjects is verb + sHe likes ice cream. My brother likes ice cream. The dog likes ice cream.Plural subjects have a verb from with no -s.They like ice cream. The dogs like ice cream.This is true for present tense
The verb reviewed is used after both singular and plural nouns.
Sees A singular verb has the form - verb + s. walk does not have + s shirts has + s but it is not a verb it is a noun. fly is a verb but it does not have + s sees is a verb it is see + s