they can be tence because of pain, if they need to go toilet, if they are hungry or if they are annoyed u can useally tell if they are tence if they are wagging their tail
The past progressive tense is 'was playing'.
Tiene is not used with I. When you speak in first person you use "tengo" <<< EXACTLY. Tiene means: "has". it is used for he/she/it. Conjugations in first person (yo or I): 1. tengo--is used in the present tense. example: Yo tengo gatos. (I have cats.) 2.tenía-- is used in the past tense example: Yo tenía gatos. (I had cats.) 3.tendré-- is used in the future tense example: Yo tendré gatos. (I will have cats.) Conjugations in 3rd person. (he, she, it) or (él,ella,eso) 1.tiene-- is used in the present tense. example: él tiene gatos. (he has cats.) Ella tiene gatos. (She has cats). Esa casa tiene gatos. (That house has cats in it.) Esa represents it, but in spanish you must name a noun to accompany it, in this case it was casa or house. 2.tenía-- same as in first person 3. tendrá-- is used in the future tense. example: él tendrá gatos. (He will have cats.) same with she; Esa niña tendrá gatos. (That girl will have cats.) It in spanish eso, is accompanied by a noun, in this case niña or girl.
Was is the singular past tense of the verb to be. I was, He was, She was, It was. The dog was, the cat was, etc. Were is the plural past tense--They were, we were, you were, the dogs were, the cats were. The possible point of confusion is when you refers to just one person--it still requires were, not was.
Yes, napping can be used as an adjective.Example:The napping cats look so peaceful. (napping is an adjective describing the noun cats)Napping can also be used as a gerund (verbal noun) and a verb.Examples:Napping is a great stress reliever. (gerund, subject of the linking verb is)Several gray cats were napping in the warm sunshine. (verb, used with a past tense auxiliary verb to create the past progressive tense)
mean can also mean rude but if you are looking for something in common with meant....mean is a present tense for meant and meant is past tense... examples ex: what do you mean? ex: he meant that he had 4 dogs, not four cats.
The past tense of comb is "combed" We combed the woods looking for the lost child. I combed my hair this morning You combed the want-ads for jobs yesterday, let's go play today. She combed all the snarls out of her cats fur. Comb is an verb and a noun. A comb (what you brush your hair with) is a noun and therefore doesn't have a past tense.
Am, is, and are are present tense forms of be. The past tense forms of be are was and were. The future tense of be is will be.
Past tense I had Present tense I have Future Tense I will have
Inflectional morphemes are affixes added to a root word that indicate grammatical information such as tense, number, case, or gender. They do not change the basic meaning of the word but rather modify its grammatical function. Examples include the plural "-s" in "cats" or the past tense "-ed" in "walked".
J'avais des chats [avant]. The [avant] (before) is optional, as the use of the past tense "avais" implies that you don't have them any more.
The past tense of did is did. The present tense of did is do. The future tense of did is will do.
past tense is got future tense is will get