I look at your watch = Present Simple, the 1st person, singular.
I am looking at your watch = Present Continuous, the 1st person, singular.
I look at my watch.
The present perfect tense of "watch" is "have watched" or "has watched." For example, "I have watched that movie before."
Past tense: She watched a movie yesterday. Present tense: She is watching a movie now. Future tense: She will watch a movie tomorrow.
The past tense of "watch" is "watched."
The endings for present tense verbs in English depend on the subject pronoun. For regular verbs, the endings are usually "-s" for third person singular subjects (he, she, it) and "-es" for singular subjects that end in -s, -z, -sh, -ch, or -x. For example, "He talk s" or "She watch es".
The rule for nouns ending in -ch is that the plural is formed by adding -es, e.g. watch - watches; church - churches; branch - branches. Watch also changes to watches when conjugating the third person singular present tense - he/she/it/watches.
The present tense of watch is:I/You/We/They watch.He/She/It watches.The present participle is watching.
The past tense is watched.The present tense is:I/You/We/They watch.He/She/It watches.The present participle is watching.The future tense is will watch.
Yes it's the present tense.
I/you/we/they watch. He/she/it watches. The present participle is watching.
It is watched.
I/you/we/they have watched. He/she/it haswatched.
The present perfect tense of "watch" is "have watched" or "has watched." For example, "I have watched that movie before."
I/you/we/they have watched. He/she/it haswatched.
Rose watches for the light to change.
Watch your step!watch and learnwatch your backWatch out!A watched pot never boils.not on my watchwatch your spendingwatch your weight
The rule for nouns ending in -ch is that the plural is formed by adding -es, e.g. watch - watches; church - churches; branch - branches. Watch also changes to watches when conjugating the third person singular present tense - he/she/it/watches.
Specto is the first person singular present active indicative of the verb spectare, "to look at, to watch". The Latin present can be translated with the the English present ("I look at; I watch") or the present progressive ("I am looking at; I am watching").