Esci
"Never quit" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Mai smettere.Specifically, the adverb mai means "never." The infinitive smettere means "to give up, to quit." The pronunciation is "meye* SMEHT-teh-reh."*The sound is similar to that in the English noun "eye."
Quit wishing! Make it happen! I wish I could!!! ;-)
Yes, Agusta -Westland produce quit a few helicopters, notaably the AW 101 Merlin
The past participle of 'quit' is 'quit' or 'quitted.'
quit after me mabye
quit = aufhören quit = aufgeben
The past participle (and simple past) can be either quit or quitted. (Most commonly quit)
The simple past tense of "quit" is "quit" (pronounced the same) or "quitted."
Quit is the present tense of the word quit.
Quit doesn't change in the past tense or for the past participle. Present and past tense are quit; the past participle is quit, as well.
The past tense of 'quit' is 'quit', not quitted.
Let me answer that with another question. What the hell is your problem? Why wont you quit being an idiot and search it up on Google? Btw it's "fiore".