Chances are YES!!! You have found a loved one. Just wait to get to know her a lttle bit before you make the first move.
The man waited while the lady did her hair. He waited for about 20 minutes.
3 hours
4,200 seconds.
i have mine 3 times and i waited 2weeks befor i changed it and you should change it quickly
Yes, the word 'wait' is both a noun (wait, waits) and a verb (wait, waits, waiting, waited).Examples:The wait between planes is only twenty minutes. (noun)We will wait at the entrance for my mom. (verb)
Wait is a noun and a verb. Noun: There is a forty-five minute wait. Verb: We waited for forty-five minutes.
Realized
Waited
Instantly, Mary noticed that the children sitting on the bench at the door of the courtroom were squirming, apparently because they had waited a long time for her to come out.
I found I had waited to no avail. As the patient feral cat waited for a passing mouse, he seemed frozen in place prior to his pounce. I waited and waited for for my waiter, but I just had to get out of my waders.
The past of wait is waited: I waited for the bus, I had waited for the bus for over an hour.
The sentence "It will being waited" is a mixture of tense forms and is therefore not correct.'waited' is the past participle of wait. The past participle is used for past tense, the passive tense, the perfect tenses or as an adjective.'It will' is future.'being' is the present participle of 'be'Depending on what the sentence is intended to mean, some alternatives might be:In general situations:-It will wait.It is waiting.It waited.It was waiting.It had been waiting.It will be waiting.It will have been waiting. ("If I get to I get the bus station in the next 15 minutes, and the bus is still waiting, it will have been waiting for me for more than an hour.")In a restaurant:-It is being waited upon. (e.g. a table in a restaurant)It will be waited on.It was being waited on... ("The table was actually being waited on when the legs collapsed!")