supervisor
supervisor
The Soldier guarding the detaineeguardGuard
When searching captured detained personnel, the identification and positioning of each member typically involve a designated team leader or officer responsible for the overall operation. They coordinate with other team members, such as security personnel and intelligence officers, to ensure that each detainee is properly identified, searched, and documented. This process often includes verifying identities through identification documents or databases and ensuring that detainees are placed in secure positions to maintain safety and order.
Searching is the present participle of the verb search. The past tense is searched.
The present participle is searching.
The adjective forms for the verb to search are the present participle, searching (a searching look), the past participle, searched (the searched records), and the adjective searchable.
No, the word 'searched' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to search (searches, searching, searched). The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Examples:Verb: They have already searched this area.Adjective: We can eliminate the searched area.
Always (usually) a volunteer...the tunnel rat.
Translation: I am the one who is searching, Or I the one who is being searched for
Yes, checked bags are typically screened and may be searched by security personnel before being loaded onto the airplane.
The modifier in the sentence is "Driving slowly around the corner". It provides additional information about how Mary was driving while searching for a parking space.
There is no direct way to determine if someone has searched for you. Search engines like Google do not provide this information to individuals. If someone visits your social media profiles or website after searching for you, you may see an increase in traffic or notifications but this does not confirm that they specifically searched for you.