The verb of song is sing.
As in "to sing to something or someone".
song
Song is a noun and doesn't have a past participle. Verbs have past participles. Sing is a verb the past participle of sing is sung. sing / sang / sung He has sung this song hundreds of times.
It means that the speaker is not familiar with idiomatic English. In English, the verb "sing" is used for songs, while the verb "tell" is used for tales or stories. E.g. "Our hosts entertained us. John told us a funny story and Mary sang a song while playing the guitar."
singing is a form of the verb to singIt can also be a form of verbal called a gerund. A gerund is a verb used as a noun.For example, "Singing can improve your lung capacity"
To me, I LOVE that song!!
Song is a noun, not a verb, and does not have any verb forms.
song
The verb is sang. Sang is the past tense of sing.The word song is a noun.
Noun
The verb is: Playing. Hope this helped!
The verb for song is sing.Other verbs are sings, singing and sung.Some example sentences are:"I will sing for you on your birthday"."She sings beautifully"."He is singing in the band later"."I sung my heart out".
She is going to record the song next week.
The word girls is a plural noun taking a plural verb; the singular form is girl. Examples:The girls are performing their song next.The girl is performing her song next.
song: noun. He wrote the song at the start of his career. sing: verb. He'll sing the tune for this audience tonight.
Heard.
In 'You were expecting a phone call.' the helping verb is 'were'. In 'I was expecting a phone call.' the helping verb is 'was'. "Am, is, are, was, were, be, being, been, these are the linking verbs, try to fit them in!" This is a song I owe to my sixth grade English teacher who helped me figure this out! So, in your case, were would be the helping verb:) Try to sing the song, it really helps and it's pretty addicting!
That's just conjugating the verb hablar - it's probably an educational song.