Yes, voted, the past tense of vote, is an action, therefore it is a verb.
A verb is a word that describes an action (run, walk, etc), a state of being (exist, stand, etc) or occurrence (happen, become, etc).
Voted is the main verb, but there are subsidiary verbs such as 'double', and 'make'
"Has" is a verb. It is the third person singular present of the verb "have."
That is the correct spelling of the past tense verb or adjective "elected" (voted into office).
There is no past tense for "voters" as the word is not a verb. A past tense is the word to describe the action/verb retrospectively. If you were meaning "vote", the past tense of this word is "voted".
S-TV-DO-OC Examples: I voted him, president. "I" is the subject, :voted" is the verb, "him" is the direct object, and "president" is the OC since it describes "him''. She called my father a liar. "She" is the subject, "'called" is the verb, "father" is the direct object, and "liar" is the OC since it describes "father''.
Victoria voted overwhelmingly for federation.In 1898 - 100,000 voted 'yes', 22,000 voted 'no'In 1899 - 152,000 voted 'yes', 10,000 voted 'no'
No they can not be voted out.
no because they have not voted. if u have voted and they lied then yes
Active means the verbs are active, not helped with a tiny "be" verb (is, are, was, were, have, had etc.).The chairman told you that the legislature passedthe bill.The chairman TOLD...the legislature PASSED...PassiveB It was voted by the legislature to pass.C The bill was passed by the legislature.A clue to passive voice is a version of the verb "to be" which are helping verbs (is, was, were, etc.), and use of "by" in the sentence.
Depends on how many people voted for it.
Over 200,000,000 voted (including voted twice or more )
tiffiny, Julie and Sammy voted for Andrew meaghan voted for Sean and cam's vote was not shown Andrew was voted off