Yes, depending on what dialect you speak.
If you speak UK English, Australian English, etc., it is a past tense of the verb "deam", whereas in US English, I think "dreamed" is used.
The past form of the word "dream" is "dreamt" in British English and "dreamed" in American English.
Dreamt would be my preference - but dreamed is right too. I think dreamt is the British version.
Some commonly-used words in English which end in 'mt' are dreamt, undreamt, and possibly daydreamt. Other derivatives are outdreamt and redreamt.An uncommon word in this category is 'screamt' (a Shakespearean alternative to 'screamed') .This list doesn't include scientific terms or abbreviations such as 'mt' (mountain), 'pmt' (PreMenstrual Tension), 'mgmt' (management), names, non-English words and so on.An amt is also the term for an administrative district in Denmark and Norway. (Ref Webster's English language dictionary, 1913)Rarely used words found in some dictionaries are:appromt (to quicken, to prompt) Listed in Webster's.promt (prompt). Both spellings are listed in Webster's Dictionary and others.
Dreamt
The word is dreamt.
According to the Oxford Dictionary website, dreamed or dreamt are both acceptable past tenses of dream. Dreamt is more common in British English, whereas dreamed is more common in American English.
No, jov is not officially a word in the English language. It is not in the English dictionary nor is it in the Scrabble dictionary.
Why don't you look in an English dictionary, you might find it there.
No this is not a word of English dictionary.
Dreamt - the past tense of dream
Aavalu is not an English word. The word is not found in the dictionary.
No, it is not. Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis is.