It is spelled the same - "read" - but pronounced like "red".
The past tense is also proofread. However, while it is spelled the same, it is pronounced as though the letter A is silent and as if spelled proof-red
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.
If you mean, "not old", The word is spelled "new", just as you spelled it. If you mean "having knowledge of something", the word is "knew". These are sound-alike words. Knew is the past tense of know.
The past tense of the verb to strip is spelled stripped.The similar word for having alternating lines of color (stripes) is striped.
The word industry doesn't have a past tense or a present tense as it is a noun.
In past tense, the word "enroll" is spelled "enrolled."
Yes and no. 'Red' generally refers to the color but although it is spelled the same way in both tenses, when being used in the past tense, the word 'read' is pronounced the same way as the word 'red'.
The past tense of the verb jump is jumped
Speak is an irregular verb, which means that it is not spelled the same in the past tense. The past tense of "speak" is "spoke."
If it is spelled the SAME as head, it IS head. If you mean a word that has SOME of the letters the same, here are some: Dead, lead, read (past tense).
"Try" in the past is spelled like this: tried.
The past tense is spelled. (Spelt is also accepted but it's mostly British)
A word with 2 spellings and 2 pronunciations is known as a heteronym. Examples include "read" (present tense) and "read" (past tense), which are spelled the same but pronounced differently.
No, it is not an adverb. The word spelled is a past tense (and past participle) of the verb "to spell" (spelled can also mean "relieved at a task").
A homograph is a word that is spelled the same as another word but has a different meaning or is pronounced differently. A homograph of read, pronounced "reed" is "read," pronounced "red."
The past tense is also proofread. However, while it is spelled the same, it is pronounced as though the letter A is silent and as if spelled proof-red
The word is "read." When the letter "r" is moved from the beginning to the end of the word, it changes from present tense (read) to past tense (read).