Sped is the preterit,( I sped) past conditional ( I would have sped), and plusperfect (I had sped) of the verb speed.
The verb is sped :)
sped. The past participle is also sped. They sped through the night.
sped, ran, went fast
The past tense of 'to speed' is 'sped', in all persons of the conjugation. 'Sped' is also this verb's past participle.
The word 'speed' is both a noun and a verb. The verb forms are: speed, speeds, speeding, speeded, sped.
sped
'Lawn mower' is an English equivalent of 'Cortacésped'.The masculine noun 'cortacésped' combines the verb 'cortar' and the noun 'césped'. The infinitive 'cortar' means 'to cut, shear, shred'. The masculine noun 'césped' means 'lawn, grass'. The masculine singular definite article is 'el' ['the'], and the singular indefinite article is 'un' ['a, one'].It's pronounced 'SEH-speh'.
The group sped away from the police.He sped up his writing in order to finish the test before the time ran out.
SPED timeline of the philippines
Sped is the past tense of speed.
Not sure about sped, but the speed is called tempo.
Answer: Yes, 'sped' is the past participle of 'speed'. Example sentence: the car sped past the stop sign. 'Sped' is also short for special education. a sped is a person who has troubles with managing time and may have trouble with reading or writing it could be someone who is dyslexic