when
The past tense of "is" is "was". The past tense of "whole" is also "whole" because it does not change in its past tense form.
v. rubbed, rub·bing, rubspast: rubbed.Example:He sighed and rubbed his hands with pleasure, like a man newly restored to liberty. (W. Scott)
In English, when adding the -ed suffix to form the past tense, we generally do not double the final consonant if the word ends in a vowel-consonant-vowel pattern (such as in "show"). Therefore, "show" becomes "showed" rather than "showwed" when forming the past tense. This rule helps maintain consistent pronunciation patterns in the language.
The error in the sentence is the use of present tense ("is") instead of past tense ("was") to describe George W. Bush as the President of the US, as he was president in the past. Fixing this error would make the sentence grammatically correct.
To form the past tense of a word by doubling the consonant, typically double the final consonant when adding "-ed" only if the word meets the following criteria: 1) one syllable, 2) ends in a single vowel followed by a consonant, 3) has the stress on the final syllable, and 4) is not ending in "w", "x", or "y". Examples include "shop" (shopped), "bop" (bopped), and "plan" (planned).
The silent consonant in the word "whole" is the "w."
The past tense of drown in drowned.
The past tense of "shop" would be "shopped". bUT SOME SAY IT IS " SHOPED" BUT THE CORRECT IS "SHOPPED" WITH DOUBLE "P'' w/ /ED/.
whole ...
There is no past tense of past tense because it is not a verb. For instance, there is no past tense of the word 'desk' (there is no 'desked' or 'did desk', because desk is a noun, not a verb.Or it could mean: Past perfect.Past perfect is sometimes described as 'past in the past'. It is used to show that one thing in the past happened before another thing in the past.Example: The race had finished before the rain started.
v. rubbed, rub·bing, rubspast: rubbed.Example:He sighed and rubbed his hands with pleasure, like a man newly restored to liberty. (W. Scott)
Whole Number
There are no distinct algebra words beginning with W. The term whole numbers can be used with some algebraic expressions.
Wedge and Whole number :)
Well, yes! Width, that's all I know of.... Width, weight and "whole number".
Yes, Whole Number. But that's the only one
warm-hearted, wonderful, wise, witty, whole-hearted and worthy
The words are who, whom, and all words that start with WR.These includewrackwranglewrapwreckwrenwrenchwringwristwritewrithewrongwrotewrung