i have sat
The present perfect form of the verb 'sit' is 'have sat.'
The past perfect form of the verb "sit" is "had sat."
Yes, "sit" is considered a base form of the verb. It is the present tense form, and its past tense form is "sat."
No, "sit down" is not a simple present tense. It is a phrasal verb that combines the base form of the verb "sit" with the particle "down" to indicate the action of taking a seat.
I/You/We/They sit. He/She/It sits. The present participle is sitting.
The present perfect of "sit" is "have/has sat." For example: "I have sat in this chair before."
The past perfect form of the verb "sit" is "had sat."
Yes, "sit" is considered a base form of the verb. It is the present tense form, and its past tense form is "sat."
No, it is a verb form, where "do" is the auxiliary verb for sit and takes the conjugation "does" (present tense, third person singular). Not is an adverb.
The present perfect of "sit" is "have/has sat." For example: "I have sat in this chair before."
Sitting is the present participle of the verb "sit". Sit is an irregular verb.
No, "sitting" is not an irregular verb. The past tense of "sit" is "sat," which follows the regular pattern of adding "-ed" to form the past tense in English.
Sit is already a verb. For example "to sit somewhere" is an action and therefore a verb.
The verb "sit" has the following forms: sit (present), sat (past), and sitting (present participle).
The present progressive tense of "sit" is "is sitting" or "are sitting," depending on the subject.
No, "sitting" is not a preposition. It is a gerund form of the verb "sit" and functions as a noun in a sentence.
'Sit' is a verb, so it does not have a plural form. The word 'sits' is not a plural, but rather, it is the present tense of the word 'sit'.
I/You/We/They sit. He/She/It sits. The present participle is sitting.