X-rayed is the past tense of X-ray.
The past tense of "x ray" is "x-rayed" and the past participle is also "x-rayed."
The past tense of "x-ray" is spelled as "x-rayed."
You usex-ray as a verb just as it is. Depending on past, present and future tense, it would change. Example: I will x-ray the fish tomorrow. I x-rayed the fish yesterday. I am x-raying the fish in 2 minutes.
X-ray is a verb. It begins with the letter X.
X-ray is used as a verb. It begins with the letter x.
in german, in the past tense when there isn't a change of state (: x
The word 'crossed' in a verb and an adjective.The word crossed is the past participle, past tense of the verb to cross (crosses, crossing, crossed). The past participle of the verb is also an adjective (crossed fingers or crossedbridges).The word cross is is a noun, a verb, or an adjective.The noun cross is a singular, common noun; a word for a mark, object, or figure formed by two short intersecting lines or pieces, a word for a thing.
yeah i belive so. hope i helped x lesleyxxx
No, the word 'injured' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to injure. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:She injured her wrist while rock climbing. (verb)I drove the injured dog right to the vet. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: The x-ray showed that the injured dogbroke no bones. He was just badly shaken. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'dog' in the second sentence.
The past tense of the verb to exist is existed(was real, was in place).
This will is future. This is a demonstrative pronoun and will is a verb or it may be a noun, depending on the rest of your sentence. But if the whole sentence is something like this: "This will of the late Dr. X was found in the top drawer", then THIS is a demonstrative pronoun and WILL can only be a noun. This is the only way that the two words can be used in a group.
No. The preterit and imperfect tenses are forms of the past tense and express when an action occurred. An impersonal expression is one in which a general statement (or question) is made and the verb applied is not carried out by a specified subject. The impersonal form is not a type of tense.