poor cleaning and sanitizing
The present simple tense of the verb "clean" is "clean" for the pronouns I, you, we, and they (e.g., I clean the house every day). For the pronouns he, she, and it, it is "cleans" (e.g., She cleans the dishes after dinner).
Dishwashers, by design, clean dishes. So they'll all work well, but it depends also on the type of detergent you use. anonymous@oola.com
On what product? Clorox will clean crap out of glasses and off dishes. I think water would take out that product stain,.
The present tenses of "clean" are: I clean You clean He/she/it cleans We clean They clean
a bus boy cleans up after people are done with their dinner, or just cleans up anything that need to be cleaned bus boys are meant to clean up the leftovers from customers such as cleaning the table, washing dishes etc.
Clean the dishes.
It is "clean/cleans".
Ordinary soap that is not powder is an example of a household product that one can use to clean a car
so you can have clean dishes to eat on.
Well If you clean the clean dishes first Then if you clean the dirty dishes first the chance of the clean ones getting dirty. Hope this helps!
Just wondering..... what is "it"?
it cleans watches