Past tense: did
Done is the past participle of do. Did is the past form of do.
do / did / done
I do the cooking every night.
I did the cooking last night.
I have always done the cooking.
The verb of done is do. As in "to do something".
The verb of the word done is do. As in "to do something".
Have done is a verb phrase. It's made up of the verb have, which is being used as an auxiliary verb, and the past participle done. It creates the present perfect tense of do.I/We/You/They have doneHe/She/It has done
The word doesn't is a contraction, a shortened form for 'does not', a verb, adverb combination. The word doesn't functions as a verb or auxiliary verb in a sentence. Examples:He does not have his homework done. Or, He doesn't have his homework done.
done is a verb but the correct verb is did - he did.
It can be (an enforced absence). It is a form of the verb "enforce."
Has is a form of the verb to have. Has she fed the dog? Has he done his chores? It is a conjugation of the verb that is pertinent to only the third person singular (he, she, it). It is present tense of the verb example: "Have they done this?" "Has she done that?"This past tense asks if something has been done prior to, or as my spanish teacher says past in the future. When you ask if something has already been done, it is uncertain if it has been done but it could have been. "she has done it" it has already been done in the past. I think it's called a helping verb.
No, it is not an adverb.The word doing is a verb form (a participle) and gerund (noun). There is no adverb form.
"Is" is the correct present tense, third person singular form of the verb be.I am (first person singularWe are (first person plural)You are (second person singular and plural)He/She/It is (third person singular)They are (third person plural)Was/were is past tense.I wasWe wereYou wereHe/She/It wasThey were
"Is" is a form of the verb "to be" and is not a preposition. Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other elements in a sentence.
It depends on what kind of question eg:present simple - Where do you live. verb do = the base form.past simple - Where did you live last year. verb is did = past tense form of do.present continuous - What are you doing after lunch. verb is doing = present participle form of do.present perfect - What have you done with the keys. verb is done = past participle form of do.For yes/no questions the verb could be a be verb - Areyou happy. verb is are = plural present form of be.(I have not put question marks in the questions because sometime wiki answers does not like answers with questions in them).
The word you've is a contraction, a shortened form for the pronoun 'you' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'have'. The contraction you've functions as the subject and verb (or auxiliary verb) of a sentence or clause. Example:You have done a good job. Or, You've done a good job.