The past tense of many verbs is formed by adding ed.
Examples:
remember + ed = remembered
climb + ed = climbed
If a verb ends in e, drop e before adding ed.
Examples:
phone - phoned
arrive - arrived
If a verb ends in y, change the y to ibefore adding ed.
Examples:
carry - carried
try - tried
If a verb ends in a short vowel followed by a single consonant, double the final consonant.
Examples:
trip- tripped
pop - popped
PRESENT TENSEThe present tense verb tells what is happening right now. To form present-tense verbs, use the plain verbs or use isor are before the verb and adding ing to the verb.
Examples:
We eat. We are eating.
He servers. He is serving.
Note: However 'ing' is also used for present, past, and future progressive tense.
Present Progressive: using am/is/are with verb form ending in -ing. Example: is examining
Past Progressive: using was/were with the verb form ending in -ing. Example: was examining
Future Progressive: using will be or shall be with the verb form ending in -ing. Example: will be examining or shall be examined
FUTURE TENSEThe future tense verb tells about things that will happen in the future. To form the future-tense verb, use will/shallbefore the verb.
Examples:
We will be eating.
Tomorrow we will walk to school.
When you use will, you may also have to add a helping verb and the ending ing.
Tomorrow we will be walking to school.by ruth faith a. salvador from philipines makati city
Ran is the past tense of the verb to run, which can be transitive or intransitive. e.g. He ran to work (intransitive) He ran the distance. (transitive) They ran the dogs every weekend. (transitive) They ran a travel agency. (transitive)
transitive
The word "transitive" is not a verb, it's an adjective. A transitive verb is an action verb that has a direct object.
Transitive
To fell a tree = transitive I fell = intransitive
Ran is the past tense of the verb to run, which can be transitive or intransitive. e.g. He ran to work (intransitive) He ran the distance. (transitive) They ran the dogs every weekend. (transitive) They ran a travel agency. (transitive)
transitive
The word "transitive" is not a verb, it's an adjective. A transitive verb is an action verb that has a direct object.
It can be used as both a transitive and intransitive verb.
Transitive
Yes. Any verb that takes a direct object is a transitive verb (as in: Lady GaGa HAS a ________).
Transitive nouns don't exist. There are, however, transitive verbs. Transitive verbs must have a direct object. For example, "holds" is a transitive verb because it requires a direct object. "She holds" is not a complete thought, but "she holds flowers" is.
"Vt" is an abbreviation for "transitive verb." In linguistic terms, a transitive verb is a verb that requires an object to complete its meaning.
No, a transitive verb is a verb that requires both a direct subject and one or more objects. Some auxilliary (helping) verbs are, however, transitive verbs.
To fell a tree = transitive I fell = intransitive
transitive
Chirped is transitive