#1.foes #2.friends #3.opponents
The word "during" is a preposition and so it doesn't have a past tense.Only verbs have a past tense.
No. Raise and rise are two different verbs, and they are both present tense. The past tense of raise is raised. The past tense of rise is rose.
The auxiliary verb, did or didn't, is used with the infinitive forms of verbs to form the past tense. The auxiliary verb is conjugated, not the main verb.Examples:He went to town.He did go to town.He didn't (did not) go to town.
No, wave is a regular verb which means the past tense is waved. (the past tense of regular verbs is formed by adding -ed to the end of the verb) Wove is the past tense of the verb weave which is an irregular verb.
In the US, some things are named by the commercial product name (e.g: band aid in the US, a plaster in England), as well as the fact that America has had influences from other countries languages since it was 'discovered'
Greedy and mean would never describe Lincoln.
Verbs dont describe things
Adjectives, Adverbs, and Verbs
Adverbs for me only describe 2 thing they describe verbs and adjectives.
Pharaoh is a noun and verbs don't describe nouns.Adjectives describe nouns. Adjectives for Pharaoh might be:old rich just cruel
Verbs don't describe nouns (garden), they tell about actions or states.dig the gardenplant the gardenwater the garden
No verbs describe a car. A car is a noun, and verbs don't describe nouns. Adjectives describe nouns.Some adjectives that describe a car:fastloudredslowsmallyellow
Verbs are not describing words; adjectives are needed to describe St. Blaise. Three -ing adjectives to describe St. Blaise are:the healing saintthe praying saintthe caring saint
verbs do NOT describe anything, adjectives describe an object, verbs are 'working" words
Verbs do not describe!
Intensive verbs describe the subject complement but extensive verbs describe what the subject does.
Verbs do not describe things- those are adjectives. Verbs are action words.