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The past participle of "settled" is also "settled."
Settled is the past participle as well as the simple past tense.
The past tense of "settle" is "settled."
The past tense of settle is "settled."
Yes, it can be, to mean inhabited, or reesolved (settled territories, settled disputes).The word settled is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to settle."
The past tense of "settle" is spelled as "settled".
The immigrant family, hailing from Ireland, decided to open a pub.For immigrants of the past, the Statue of Liberty was a beacon of hope for those who came to America.The French immigrants settled well into America soon after they arrived.America was founded on the common immigrant seeking religious freedom and or significant profit from farming.When You enter another state you are considered as a emigrant.
That's an interesting question, too a subject that many people have probed into in the past. I must assert that the question you have asked just is not little botherly settled.
Yes they do.
Many indigenous races were moved around in the past.
The British Isles have been continuously settled for about 700,000 years. In the past 5,000 years, the islands have been invaded and overrun by many different groups.
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