que qued qued
It is slang in only the spoken word. It cannot be used in proper English. As slang, and has to be translated into English before it can be categorized: it means "what will . . . ".What is an interrogative pronoun.Will is part of the future tense of a verb, as in will go, will find.You should always use "What will" in school, not the slang.
Yes, the noun English is a proper noun, the name of a specific nationality and a specific language. A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. The word English is also a proper adjective.
There is no word in English spelled 'gaunts'.The nearest English word is gaunt, an adjective, a word that describes a noun. In English there are no masculine or feminine forms.
Driving?
The only word with that spelling in English dictionaries is the surname, Husted, a proper noun.
"Brang" is not recognized as a proper word in standard English. The correct past tense form of "bring" is "brought."
The word "do" can be used as a verb, a noun, and an auxiliary verb in English. It can also take on different forms in terms of tense, such as "did," "does," and "doing."
The word Tanzania is a noun. In English, nouns do not have past or present forms, only 'verbs' have past and present forms.
No, "drownded" is not a standard English word. The correct past tense forms of "drown" are "drowned" and "drowning."
Sneaked Is the original past tense form, but snuck is optional.
Past tense - was/were Present tense - am/are/is
The past tense of "proof" is "proved" or "proven." Both forms are acceptable, but "proved" is more commonly used in British English while "proven" is more common in American English.
The present tense of the verb to sleep is "sleep or sleeps".
"Brang" is a nonstandard past tense form of "bring." The correct past tense forms are "brought" and "brought" is generally accepted in standard English usage.
No. The word "is" (along with are) represents the present tense of the verb to be.The past tense forms are was and were.
You don't it is not an English word.The present, past and past participle for the verb bringare:bring / brought / broughtnot brang.
No, there is no word spelled 'setted' in English. The past tense of the verb to 'set' is set. Examples: I can set the table noun. (present) I had set the table yesterday. (past) The past tense of the verb to 'seat' is seated. The past tense of the verb to 'settle' is settled.