The past participle of "prefer" is "preferred."
The past tense of "prefer" is "preferred."
The past form of "prefer" is "preferred."
The past tense for the verb to prefer is preferred.
The past tense of the verb "prefer" is spelled with one r, not two or three. The correct past tense is "preferred."
The word 'preferred' is both a verb and an adjective. The word preferred is the past participle, past tense of the verb prefer. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Examples:verb: He preferred the lake to the theme park.adjective: The preferred condiment is the hot sauce.
The past tense of prefer is preferred.
No, the word 'preferred' is a verb, the past participle, past tense of the verb to 'prefer'.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:Carlo preferred skiing over all other sports. (verb)Swimming is Carla's preferred sport. (adjective)The noun forms of the verb to prefer are preference and the gerund, preferring.
Both are accepted, but "a quarter after" is preferred in formal writing.
prefer is a regular verb just add -ed = preferred.
India was and is a male preferred country because in the past there were more female babies born than male babies. This made the male sex less common and preferred.
Actually, it is usually a verb, but it can also be an adjective. When it is a verb, the infinitive is "to prefer" and the word "preferred" is the past tense. "She preferred chocolate ice cream, but all they had in the shop was vanilla." However, the word can also sometimes become an adjective, meaning something that is your preference: "My preferred plan is that we hold the meeting on Friday, but you may not agree."