The correct sentence is, "Did you hear?"
Capable of being heard; loud enough to be heard; actually heard; as, an audible voice or whisper., That which may be heard.
I was sitting by the hearth (fireplace) while listening to my grandfather tell me a story. The winter was cold and even the cat foresook his nightly prowl around the farmyard in favour of a warm place by the hearth.
Heard is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb 'hear' - as in "I heard John speaking to Mary."
No, it is not. It is a verb (to hear). The past participle (heard) could be an adjective.
Hear is an irregular verb because we have a different word for the past tense, we don't add -ed to make past tensehear - heard.For regular verbs we add -ed to make the past tense.walk - walked, listen - listened, talk - talkedMore irregular verbs:run - ran, eat- ate, speak - spoke, catch - caught.
That was wrong. It should have been, "Did you hear what happened yesterday?"
I heard the music, sweet and clear, right in my ear.
The past tense of hear is heard.
The past participle of "hear" is "heard."
The present tense of "heard" is "hear."
The past tense for "hear" is "heard."
Yes you hear right the movie is called shrek forever after
"Hear" is a present tense verb. Use it when you want to give the impression that an action seems to be happening right now:Today I hear the sparrows singing."Heard" is a past tense verb. Use it to indicate that something happened some time ago:Yesterday I heard the cardinals singing."Heard" is also used in the perfect and pluperfect tenses, as in the following sentences:I hear the finches now, but I have heard them on two earlier occasions too. (Perfect)Before I heard the finches, I had heard the thrushes. (Pluperfect)
The past tense of "hear" is "heard."
The past participle of "hear" is "heard."
Heared is not a word in the English language. It could be a misspelling of heard, which is the past tense and past participle of hear. The past perfect tense of hear is had heard.
The future perfect tense of "hear" is "will have heard."