In ancient Roman mythology Janus is the god of beginnings and transitions, thence also of gates, doors, doorways, endings and time. He is usually a two-faced god since he looks to the future and the past. Although there is really no mention of his personality traits, if you where to call somebody Janus-faced today it would imply that they are duplicitous.
No one's quite sure. It first shows up in Greek as kedros, but it is probably a borrowing from some other language. It passed into Latin as cedrus, and thence into English.
a cobra bite
past: destroyed past perfect: I had destroyed past continuous: I was destroying
They are from the past.
kept :D
Past: Bit Future: Will bite
The past is bitten and future will bite
The past tense of bite is bit.I bite the apple. Present formI bit the apple. Past form
"Bit" as a verb is the past indicative of "bite", and the past participle of "bite" is "bitten".
The past tense is bit.
Present tense is: I bite, you bite, he/she bites, we bite, they bite biting is the present participle I bit is the simple past I have bitten is the compound past I was biting or I used to bite is the imperfect I will bite is the future there are other tenses
Past perfect is formed with - had + past participle.The past participle of bite is bitten. So past perfect is:had bittenThat dog had bitten me twice before.
bite-bit put-put
Bitten
The past tense of "bite" is "bit".
The past participle of "bite" is "bitten."