They met on tour
Rick Wakeman became famous by marrying the rich actress named Alica Wakefield who wanted a poor man. They both met at a dinner party and they started chatting then the marraige came along and so on.
I know you are coming on this weekend to join in my room, I will be busy whole day that week, could you please pick her and take to my house. I forgot to tell you I will give the keys to the neighbour who are in the 515 room whom you met in the last visit and I will also tell them that you will come and collect the keys.
Correct grammar is "She met with John and me" because singular, "She met with me" makes more sense then "She met with I"
I know you are coming on this weekend to join in my room, I will be busy whole day that week, could you please pick her and take to my house. I forgot to tell you I will give the keys to the neighbour who are in the 515 room whom you met in the last visit and I will also tell them that you will come and collect the keys.
Base verb : meet Past : met Past participle : met meet met met
Base verb : meet Past : met Past participle : met meet met met
I'm not sure I've been asking some people and lots say yes because they claim to have met her, but she has a blog so she might be fast and she might have to look at the keys sometimes. :) P.S. I'm a fast typer XD
NO. She's my daughter and have never met him.
The predicate is the verb which describes the action. In other words what did Lucy and Neil (the subjects) do? They MET Morey, right? So what they did was: MET. Your answer is MET.
Met is the past participle of meet. It's also the past tense.
E is the syllable for met