Ate
Yes, it is the past tense of eat.
The word 'at' is not a verb and so doesn't have a past tense.
"will" is the helping verb in the sentence "Nick will eat spaghetti for dinner." Will creates the future tense of eat.
Verb: Walk Past Tense: Walked Past Participle: Walked Verb: Eat Past Tense: Ate Past Participle: Eaten Verb: Write Past Tense: Wrote Past Participle: Written Verb: Break Past Tense: Broke Past Participle: Broken
The verb "listen" becomes the past tense "listened" when rearranged.
The past tense is ate.(Be careful - eat is an irregular verb which means the past participle is different. The past participle is eaten)The present tense is:I/You/We/They eat.He/She/It eats.The present participle is eating.The future tense is will eat.
Regular verbs add "ed" to the end of the verb. Irregulars include go/went, sing/sang, buy/bought, eat/ate, and run/ran. There are many, many more.
The term "was sitting" is a verb in the past progressive tense.
The word "is" is followed by a past tense verb when forming the past continuous tense, such as "He was eating," where "was" is the past tense of "is" and "eating" is the past participle of "eat" used in the continuous form.
Yes, 'ate' is a verb. Specifically, 'ate' is the past tense of the verb 'to eat'.
The common English verb that becomes its own past tense by rearranging its letters is "read."
Eating is a present participle, which can be used as a gerund, an adjective, or a verb. When present participles are used as verbs, they create the progressive (continuous) forms and require the use of an auxiliary verb to show tense. Am/is/are eatingis the present progressive tense. The past progressive tense is was/were eating.