Couple is a plural noun so -- walk together -- is correct
Yes. I am walking. (Verb) I went for a walk. (Noun) In the first example, walking is a participle. A particle is a form of a verb. In the second example, walk in the object of went. An object can be, and is in this case a noun.
Walks is a verb. The infinitive form is to walk.
The verb in this sentence is 'walk', but the form it takes is incorrect for this sentence. A few sentences with the correct form of 'walk' could be: The cat walks slowly. (present tense form). The cat is walking slowly. (present progressive form) The cat walked slowly. (past tense form)
In the example given, the correct selection is "He and I are going for a walk." Words such as "him" or "me" are object pronouns. It is also traditionally polite to use "he" or "she" before "I" in a list (such as "He, she, and I went for a walk").
Walk-ins is correct, as in "The exam centre allows people to do walk-ins."
The question is not complete. What do you mean that he walks 80 of the distance. Kindly correct it and repost it.
You really cant... because people walk the way they walk... i know a couple of gay guys and they dont walk any diffrently then the straight guys. Sometimes people walk sisy like... girly like...and such.
Yes, "We do walk." is a correct sentence (the subject is 'we', the verb is 'do walk').
If you are using walk as a noun (taking a walk, or a sidewalk), the plural is simply walks. E.g. She likes to take long walks.
Yes. I am walking. (Verb) I went for a walk. (Noun) In the first example, walking is a participle. A particle is a form of a verb. In the second example, walk in the object of went. An object can be, and is in this case a noun.
Walks is a verb. The infinitive form is to walk.
No the singular form of walk is walks. This is used with singular subjects (except for I) She walks to school. -- she is singular The doctor walks to work. -- the doctor is singular. I walk to work. -- I is singular but for I the base form of the verb is used
they don't walk they slither.
it walks on all fours
No, it is a regularly conjugated verb. I WALKED YOU WALKED HE SHE WALKED WE WALKED YOU WALKED THEY WALKED I WALK YOU WALK HE SHE WALKS WE WALK YOU WALK THEY WALK
I/you/we/they walk. He/she/it walks. The present participle is walking.
Answer 1: Frogs can't walk they can just hop and that is technically how they walk. Answer 2: There is a kind of frog really walks when it raised its feet, like a dog. It walk like how carabao walks but slower. It is abundant in the Philippines and i saw it two times. by drimcaster