Transitive means that the verb needs something to go to... For example: I open... needs something after- for example 'a door' or 'the box'. So, a lot of verbs are transitive. We always eat something (He eats bread).
An example of a intransitive verb would be 'sleep', because we don'r sleep something, but we do eat something: He sleeps every night.
To summarise; A transitive verb needs an object, an intransitive verb doesn't.
'Do' is used in the simple present tense when using first person, second person, or third person plural. For example: I do, you do and they do. 'Did' is used as the simple past tense of 'do'. For example: I did, you did and they did.
'Do' is used in the simple present tense when using first person, second person, or third person plural. For example: I do, you do and they do. 'Did' is used as the simple past tense of 'do'. For example: I did, you did and they did.
Using "gift" as a transitive verb, the past tense would be "gifted".
Using the verb 'do': Simple past tense: did Present perfect tense: I/You/We/They have done. He/She/It has done.
These are irregular verbs. An example is the verb 'eat'. The simple past tense is 'ate' whilst the past participle is 'eaten'.
You use "s" with verbs in the simple present tense when the subject is he, she, or it. For example, "He eats," "She studies," "It runs."
The simple present tense is used to describe actions that happen regularly, habitual actions, general truths, or facts. It is formed by using the base form of the verb. For example, "I eat breakfast every morning."
Simple past refers to the simple past tense of a verb. It is used to talk about actions that happened in the past. The past tense of regular verbs is formed by adding -ed to the end of a verb. For example: finished is the past tense of finish. For irregular verbs, there is no pattern to forming the past tense. You must simply learn the list of past tense verbs. For example: sang is the past tense of sing.
she loves her parents
She sang her heart out.
The cat chased the mouse.The mouse was chased.To make passive verb phrases use be + past participlepresent simple - eat = is eatenpast simple - ate = was eatenpresent continuous - is asking = is being askedpast continuous - was asking = was being asked
usedIn simple past tense, you would say, "I used a computer last week."