The present participle is searching.
The present perfect tense of the verb "search" is "have searched" or "has searched." It's like saying, "I have searched for my keys everywhere except the one place I actually left them." So, next time you can't find your keys, just remember to use that present perfect tense while you tear your house apart looking for them.
Have/Has searched.
Searching is the present participle of the verb search. The past tense is searched.
The adjective forms for the verb to search are the present participle, searching (a searching look), the past participle, searched (the searched records), and the adjective searchable.
If done by means of a warrant, yes. The occupant(s) need not be present.
Present proof to the court that the premises that were searched were NOT the address contained on the warrant.
it is searched
searched around frantically, feverishly, ---- Angered, he searched ,Irate, He searched . he searched Raging, he searched around , Fuming he searched around
This is not a question. A question must be asked in order to receive an answer.
I searched and searched and searched for this answer. its nowhere to be found
"Searched" is spelled as s-e-a-r-c-h-e-d.
No, the word 'searched' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to search (searches, searching, searched). The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Examples:Verb: They have already searched this area.Adjective: We can eliminate the searched area.