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".
That is the correct spelling of the verb "to choose" (the past tense is chose).
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".
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."