The verb is admire.
present singular is admires - She admires her teacher.
present plural is admire - They admire their teacher
Where does the use of "am" in the present tense singular of the verb originate?
The present form of the verb "be" is "am" for first person singular (I), "is" for third person singular (he/she/it), and "are" for plural (we/you/they).
First person present, singular: I am.First person present, plural: We are.
IS: third person singular of the verb TO BE. Is is a copula.
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
The verb 'is' is the present singular tense of the word are. She is going to the store. The verb 'are' is the present plural tense of the word is. They are going shopping. Note: Both is and are are known of the Present Tense Verb "To Be"
The verb 'was' is the past tense verb for a first and third person singular subject. The present tense of was is am and is.Examples (present, singular subject):I am... (I was)You are... (you were)He/she/it is... (he/she/it was)Examples (present, plural subject):We are... (we were)You are... (your were)They are...(they were)
No, it is a verb. It is the present tense, third person singular of the verb "to prefer."
A "singualr" verb is probably a misspelling of a "singular" verb, which is a form of a verb agreeing with a singular subject. In English, there is usually no distinction in verb forms between singular and plural, except in the present indicative, for which the third person singular has different form characterized by ending in "s" if the plural present indicative does not end in "s" or in "es" when the plural present indicative does end in "s".
No 'is' is a be verb, it is a present tense singular be verb
Stands is the third person singular conjugation in the present tense of the verb to stand
The present perfect singular of the verb "to place" is "I have placed".