Yes. According to the source I used, it is listed as an irregular English verb.
Yes, burst is a verb.
Yes it's an irregular verb.
Sail is a regular verb not an irregular verb, and the past tense is sailed.
Fly is an irregular verb.
The word come is a verb. Come is an irregular verb.
"Have" is an irregular verb in English.
The past participle is also burst. (Burst is an irregular verb.)
The past participle of the verb "burst" is "burst." It is an irregular verb, so its form does not change in the past tense or past participle. For example, in a sentence: "The balloon has burst."
Have is not like a verb it is a verb! It is an irregular verb.
Sitting is the present participle of the verb "sit". Sit is an irregular verb.
Are is a form of be verb. It is the present tense plural be verb.Be is the most irregular verb in English.
The word are is the plural present tense of the verb to be. This is among the most irregular of the English language's irregular verbs. I am, he is, they are, we are, in the present; in the past it becomes I was, he was, they were, we were. In the future, I am going to be.
Yes, "throw" is an irregular verb in English. Its past simple form is "threw" and its past participle form is "thrown."
No, the verb "seem" is not irregular. It is a regular verb in English and follows the standard conjugation patterns for regular verbs in the present tense (e.g., seem, seems).
Yes, burst is a verb.
It's irregular.
It's an irregular verb.