will have swum
'Will have swum' is the verb phrase.
swum swim swam swum
Acutally, it is an intransitive verb which needs a 'helping verb' such as have.......... A sentence using the word 'swum' could be: "I've swum to the island every day." The "'ve" stands for "have," a helping verb
The word swim is an irregular verb. The simple past tense is swam whilst the past participle is swum.
No. The verb has an irregular past tense.The present tense is swim, or swims.The past tense is swam. The past participle is (have) swum.
No, fun and drum don't rhyme. Here are some words that do rhyme with drum: bum crumb dumb gum hum mum numb plum rum sum slum swum thumb
will have swum is the verb phrase.
will have swum is the verb phrase.
"Swum" is the past participle of "swim" (I swim today, I swam yesterday, I have swum there before). I couldn't believe he had swum the English Channel at such a young age.
Lots of people can swim a mile at a very young age. I think I first swum 1 mile at the age of 6.
It must be used after some form of have. He/she/it (has) swum. We/You/they (have) swum. Or having, as in: Having swum the length of the pool....
swum as in I have swum the channel
swum as in I have swum the channel
Swum is the past participle of the verb "swim".
"You have just swum" is correct. "Swam" is the past tense, while "swum" is the past participle form of the verb "swim."
infinitive: swimpast: swampast participle: swum
The present perfect is created with has/have + a past participle.I have swumWe have swumYou have swumHe/she has swumThey have swum
swum