Yes, it is the past tense of the verb 'to choose.'
Action
This tense will be past perfect because of the past simple verb chose.Your sister had looked at many dresses before she chose one
The noun clause is "whom the students chose for cheerleader", which is the direct object of the verb "know".NOTE: The relative pronoun 'whom' is not correct. Although the noun clause is functioning as the direct object of the verb "know", the relative pronoun is the subject of the relative clause.The sentence should read:We won't know who the students chose for cheerleaderuntil Monday morning?
That is the correct spelling of the verb "to choose" (the past tense is chose).
Traditionally, decision has been a noun, while decide has been its verb form. However, the sport of boxing uses decision as a verb. "A blow to the jaw decisioned the fight in its sixth round." The finance industry also uses decision as a gerund, which is the noun form of a verb created by appending ing to the verb. "I work in credit decisioning."
No, it is not. Chose is a verb: the simple past tense conjugation of the verb to choose.
Yes
Chose is a verb. It's the past tense of choose.
No its not a regular verb The past tense is chose
Action
You chose to consort with the enemy.
Chose. Chosen is the past participle.
The word choose is an irregular verb. The past tense is chose.
The word chose is the past particle of the verb to choose. The noun forms for the verb choose are chooser and the verbal noun (gerund) choosing. Another noun form is choice.
He chose to desert his friends at the mall.
Choice is the noun for the past tense verb choose.
選ぶ (erabu) is the Japanse verb for "to choose" and its past tense is 選んだ (eranda) which would be "chose".