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The word "SEE" in the sentence is the base form of the verb "to see". Verbs have both form and tense. In this sentence, "see" is used in the present tense.
no
The verb form that agrees with the sentence is "are."
The verb in the word "yesterday" is "yest." It goes in front of "day" to communicate that the event happened before the current day.
No. Begin is an irregular verb so the past tense began does not have -ed at the end.The games began yesterday.
The simple past tense of the verb to be: was and were Examples: I was ill yesterday. You were not at school yesterday.
a verb that agrees with the closest subject
The helping verb is planned. planned tells that they like prchase something.
Agree is already in verb form. As in "to agree".Other verbs are agrees and agreed. Depending on the context.Some example sentences are:"I agree with you"."He agrees with you"."She agreed with you".
Begin can be a verb. As in "to begin doing something".
Begin can already be used as a verb. For example, "to begin something" is an action and therefore a verb.
No, the word "yesterday" is not a verb. It is an adverb that indicates a time in the past, specifically the day before today.