Choose is a verb. It means to make a choice between two or more things.
The verb for making a choice is choose (chooses, choosing, chosen).
The verb for making a choice is choose (chooses, choosing, chosen).
The verb form is to choose (chooses, choosing, chosen).
Choose is the present tense. I/you/we/they choose. He/she/it chooses. The present participle is choosing.
Choose is already a verb because it is an action.Other verbs are chooses, choosing and chose.Some example sentences are:"I will choose a new car"."She chooses the red car"."We are choosing a channel to watch"."They chose to have eggs for lunch".
The verb for choice is choose.Other verbs are chooses, choosing and chose, depending on the tense.Here are some example sentences:"I will choose the dress today"."She chooses the purple dress"."We are choosing a film to watch","We chose to watch Lord of the Rings".
That is the correct spelling of the verb "to choose" (the past tense is chose).
Choose is already a verb because it is an action.Other verbs are chooses, choosing and chose.Some example sentences are:"I will choose a new car"."She chooses the red car"."We are choosing a channel to watch"."They chose to have eggs for lunch".
'Choose' is a verb and therefore has no plural form. The corresponding verb is 'choice' , the plural form of which is 'choices'.
The word is spelled choose. Choose is a verb, meaning to select or decide on. Chose is the past tense of choose.
the people of Belize chooses the government
Traditionally, decision has been a noun, while decide has been its verb form. However, the sport of boxing uses decision as a verb. "A blow to the jaw decisioned the fight in its sixth round." The finance industry also uses decision as a gerund, which is the noun form of a verb created by appending ing to the verb. "I work in credit decisioning."