The verb is will enjoy, and it is future tense.
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"
No. Sings is a verb, the third-person singular present tense form of the verb to sing.
Enjoyable is not a verb and does not have any tenses. The verb form is enjoy, and the past tense is enjoyed.
Life is not a verb so it does not have tense. Only verbs have tense.
The past progressive tense is formed by using the past tense of the verb "to be" (was/were) and adding the present participle form of the main verb with the -ing ending. For example, "She was singing."
I/you/we/they enjoy. He/she/it enjoys. The present participle is enjoying.
No, it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the verb (to enjoy).
No. Appear = present tense An example sentence is The kids appear to enjoy coloring right now. Appeared = past tense i.e. The kids appeared to enjoy coloring last night.
There is no plural form for the verb 'sang'. Verbs do not have singular or plural forms, verbs have tenses. The verb 'sang' is the past tense of the verb 'sing'. The tenses are: sing, sings, singing, sang, sung.
No, the word enjoyed is the past participle, past tense of the verb to enjoy.The noun forms for the verb are enjoyer, enjoyment, and the gerund, enjoying.
The word 'sang' is the past tense of the verb to sing.The word sing is a noun as word for an occasion of singing, or a ringing or whizzing sound.The noun forms of the verb to sing are singer and the gerund, singing.
No, "sings" is the present tense form of the verb "sing." The past tense of "sing" is "sang."