Bop, chop, cop, crop, drop, flop, hop, lop, mop, plop, pop, prop, shop, slop, sop, stop, top
2 syllables:
atop, bar hop, bed hop, big top, bus stop, catch crop, chop shop, closed shop, cough drop, dress shop, dry mop, dust mop, flag stop, flue stop, food shop, full stop, gift shop, hat shop, head shop, junk shop, nonstop, peg top, pet shop, print shop, reed stop, root crop, round top, shoe shop, skin pop, speed cop, sponge mop, talk shop, tank top, truck stop, tuck shop, whip top, wild hop
3 syllables:
beauty shop, belly flop, bucket shop, butcher shop, coffee shop, common hop, cover crop, florist shop, ginger pop, glottal stop, humming top, hunting crop, island hop, lindy hop, machine shop, mutton chop, open shop, organ stop, Pizza shop, record hop, repair shop, riding crop, running pop, single prop, soda pop, spinning top, suction stop, take a hop, traffic cop, union shop, whipping top, whistle stop
4 syllables:
Japanese hop, novelty shop, potential drop, tobacco shop
5 syllables:
American hop, European hop, motorcycle cop
The past tense of swear is swore.
I swore not to repeat the mistake again.
swore
swore
Swore is the past tense of swear. The past perfect tense of swear is had sworn.
the people in the court room swore to tell the whole truth.
"Swore" is a past tense verb of the base form "swear."
Several things rhyme with mohr. I am assuming that it is pronounced "more." bore core door floor gore lore more nor poor pore spore score swore tore wore yore
The past tense is 'swore'. The past participle is 'sworn'. For example 'I swore', 'you have sworn.'
Warren
Yes
"Swore" is the past tense of the verb "swear," while "has sworn" is the present perfect tense. "Swore" is used to refer to a single event in the past, while "has sworn" indicates that the action was completed in the past and has relevance to the present.