The student excelled in math, science, and social studies, and was one of the smartest in the class.
excelled ex: Amanda was a very strong student and excelled in all of her subjects.
No, it means "excelled".
The word excel is a verb, yes.Excels, excelling and excelled are also verbs.
No, the word 'excel' is a verb (excel, excels, excelling, excelled), meaning to surpass others or be superior in some respect.The noun form of the verb excel is excellence.
The difference between a compound sentence and a complex sentence is that a compound sentence has two independent clauses, connected by a Coordinator. A complex sentence on contains one independent clause. A complex sentence also always contains a subordinator.
you excelled on your test
He wasn't a very strong student, but he excelled in every sport he tried.
The woman excelled in architectural design.
My brother was an incredible athlete whereas I excelled in music.
I excel in math and reading (I am very good at math and reading)
The child had trouble understanding math and logic, but excelled artistically.
He was inconsistent in his studies and sports. This is a sentence which contains the word inconsistent.
I asked if there was any way for us to get into the concert.
deem = to judge, to regard as eg I deem him worthy of promotion because he has excelled this year
excelled ex: Amanda was a very strong student and excelled in all of her subjects.
Gymnastics are included in the Olympics. Sally excelled in gymnastics. Both males and females enjoy gymnastics.
The word 'excelled' is the past tense of the verb to excel.Example: Jeff did well in all of his subjects but he excelled in math.