The past tense of row is rowed.
The irregular past tense of "row" is "rowed."
The past tense of "row" is "rowed."
The past participle of "row" is "rowed."
The present tense of "row" is "row" or "rows", depending on the subject. For example, "She rows on the lake every morning" or "They row together in the regatta."
"Bow" (noun: a curved weapon / verb: to bend forward) "Tear" (noun: a drop of salty liquid / verb: to rip apart) "Lead" (noun: a heavy metal / verb: to guide) "Wind" (noun: moving air / verb: to twist or turn) "Polish" (noun: a nation in Europe / verb: to make something shiny) "Row" (noun: a line of objects / verb: to propel a boat with oars) "Moped" (noun: a type of motorbike / verb: past tense of "mope") "Invalid" (noun: a person with a disability / adjective: not valid) "Tire" (noun: a rubber wheel / verb: to become weary) "Produce" (noun: fruits and vegetables / verb: to create or manufacture)
Yes, the word 'rows' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'rows' is the plural form of the noun 'row', a word for a series of people or things arranged in a line; a horizontal arrangement of things; the line along which objects are arranged; a line of adjacent seats; continuous line of buildings along a street; a trip in a rowboat; a noisy disturbance or quarrel; a word for a thing.The verb 'rows' is the third person, singular, present of the verb to row.Example uses:The rows of cherry trees were in bloom along the Tidal Basin. (noun)Father rows to the island to check his traps each morning (verb).
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The verb 'swam' is the past tense of the verb to swim.Examples:I can swim the length of this pool.I once swam the length of this pool four times in a row.
The past tense of "row" is "rowed."
The verb 'swam' is the past tense of the verb to swim.Examples:I can swim the length of this pool.I once swam the length of this pool four times in a row.
rowed Rowed. Rowed.
The word 'bored' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to bore. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:A large machine bored a tunnel through the earth under the street. (verb)A bored student could be heard snoozing in the back row. (adjective)The word 'bore' is both a noun (bore, bores) and a verb (bore, bores, boring, bored).
The word 'potted' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to pot. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Example uses:The trees were potted in a row of concrete containers. (verb)The patio was lined with potted begonias. (adjective)
The forms for the verb to snow are: snow, snows, snowing, snowed. It "snows" here in winter. It is going "to snow" tomorrow. It is "snowing" today. It "snowed" yesterday.
The present tense of "row" is "row" or "rows", depending on the subject. For example, "She rows on the lake every morning" or "They row together in the regatta."
The past participle of "row" is "rowed."
This is the past tense of row which means to paddle a boat.
The spellings of the sound-alike terms are:rose - the flower, or past tense of riserows - plural of row, a line or arrangementroes - plural of roe deer*the word roe (fish eggs) is a homophone for row, but is already plural