read
It's spelled the same in past and present.
I see you just read my message
You read a book -- the word "read" is pronounced like "reed" if it is present tense, and like "red" if it is past tense!Example - "Please read (pronounced REED) your textbook for homework."or "I read (pronounced RED) that book last week, and it was really good."
If you are referring to more than one book it would be 'The boy has read his books.' If you are referring to more than one boy and the boys are reading separate books then it would be 'The boys have read their books.'
I can't remember how to spell it but it was in a book I read....Terminialogicalinexectitudinal ..... Really wrong spelling
That is the correct spelling of the adjective reddish, meaning having a red-toned color.The similar word is radish, a round, peppery red root vegetable.
It's how you say words in English, unlike in Latin and in languages based in/derived from Latin, English is not a phonetic language. A phonetic language is a language wherein the words are pronounced as they are spelled. Some English words can have the same spelling but different pronunciation, for example: * I like to read [ri:d]. * I have read [red] that book. Some words have different spelling but the same pronunciation, for example: * I have read [red] that book. * My favourite colour is red [red].
You read a book -- the word "read" is pronounced like "reed" if it is present tense, and like "red" if it is past tense!Example - "Please read (pronounced REED) your textbook for homework."or "I read (pronounced RED) that book last week, and it was really good."
Yes search up gwens spell book wiki and you can read all of the spells
If you had read about Tinker Bell, you would know for a spell
"Read" is the past tense of "read." For example, "I read a book yesterday." "Red" is a color. For example, "The car is painted red."
Fred Schonell has written: 'Essential read-spell' 'Essential read-spell book'
I will read the book today. (REED)orI read the book yesterday. (RED)
The past tense of "read" is also "read," pronounced as "red." For example, "I read a book yesterday."
The BEST book I have read is "Where The Red Fern Grows" I Is An Outstanding Book! I know ANYONE would like it.
Both the present tense and past tense of the verb to readis spelled read.But they are pronounced differently: The present tense is pronounced (reed), while the past tense is pronounced (red).Present: I read a book every day.Past: I read a book yesterday.
The past tense of read is also read, pronounced like "red." For example, "Yesterday, I read a book."
The homograph for the word "read" is "read." It can be pronounced as "reed" in the present tense (I read a book) and as "red" in the past tense (I read a book yesterday).
It was a little red book the size of a penny that prisoners had to try to read as a punishment