'The kite flies around her face' is a sentence not a verb.
The verb in this sentence is flies. The past form of flies is flew.
The kite flew around her face.
Flew. A+
Surprised is a verb (past tense and past participle of surprise). The participle form can be used as an adjective. Example: He was amused by the surprised look on her face.
"Erase" is the present tense of the verb. "Erased" is the past tense. Erasure is the noun form.
* I am * you/we/they are * he/she/it is
what is the form of the verb answer it ..............
It can be (tensed muscles). It is also a verb form. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb "to tense."
The past tense form of the verb "flies" in the sentence "the kite flies around her face" is "flew."
The past tense form of the verb "flies" would be "flew."
No, "flies" is not a past tense verb; it is the plural form of the noun "fly" or the third person singular form of the verb "fly" in present tense. The past tense of "fly" is "flew."
I/you/we/they fly. He/she/it flies.
Yes, banded can be a past-tense form of the verb band. As in, "They banded together to face the challenge."
"Has" is the present tense form of the verb "have." The past tense form of "has" is "had."
Tense is a noun when talking about a grammatical tense. The noun form for the adjective tense or the verb tense is tenseness. Another noun form is tension.
The present tense form of "were" is "are."
The past tense form of "destroy" is "destroyed."
Formed is the past tense of form.
struck is the past tense verbStruck IS the past tense form...of the word strike.
The present tense form of the word "have" is "have".