In the present tense, the verb 'make' follows the pattern of all regular verbs in standard English of adding an 's' to make the third person singular form. So for 'make', the third person singular form is 'makes'.
e.g., "He makes too many mistakes."
It follows the regular pattern in the present tense:
I/we/you/they make...
He/she/it makes...
But it has irregular past tense and past participle forms:
past tense: 'made' (irregular)
past participle: 'made' (irregular)
present participle 'making' (regular)
IS: third person singular of the verb TO BE. Is is a copula.
Yes, does is third person singular -- he does, she does, it does.
The pronouns used with the verb 'to be' are:I am (first person, singular)You are (second person, singular)He/she/it is (third person, singular)We are (first person, plural)You are (second person, plural)They are (third person, plural)
The word makes is a verb. It is the third person singular present tense of the verb make.
The word makes is a verb. It is the third person singular present tense of the verb make.
The verb "is" is the singular, third person, present tense conjugation of the verb "to be." The forms are: He is / She is / It is
No, it is a verb. It is the present tense, third person singular of the verb "to prefer."
everyone is plural Everyone is a type of collective pronoun which takes a singular verb therefore it is third person singular.
No.Does is a singular verb, it is the third person singular form of do. Use does with third person singular pronouns - he she it - or singular noun subjects eg:He does his homework every night.The boy does his homework every night.
Stands is the third person singular conjugation in the present tense of the verb to stand
Yes, the word "says" is a verb. It is the third person singular present tense form of the verb "say."
Yes, it is the third person singular form of the verb to expose.