The rank of lieutenant general was established by the Confederate Congress in 1862. Out of respect for George Washington, who held this high rank, the Union waited until February of 1864 to do this. Basically this rank was requested by US President Lincoln for his new general in chief, US Grant.
As General Lee waited for the daylight of dawn to survey the battlefield, he was dead set on a plan of offensive operations. He informed General Longstreet that his plan of attack would probably require the the First Corps divisions of generals Lafayette, McLaws, and John Bell Hood.
a squire
Not positive, but I'm pretty sure they had at least 13 cannons. Santa Anna had 6 pounders, but he charged and killed all the Texans before his 12 pounders could arrive. He should've waited, because he probaly would've lost fewer men.
After defeating General Lee first attempt to invade the North (Gettysburg would be the second and last attempt), President Lincoln (who waited for a Union military victory) announced the Emancipation Proclamation, the beginning of the end of slavery in the USA. President Lincoln waited for a Union victory, to give the document some credibility. Announcing the Proclamation after a lot of defeats, would be a wasted effort.
laid a siege, surrounded it and waited for them to surrender.
Waited
The past of wait is waited: I waited for the bus, I had waited for the bus for over an hour.
I found I had waited to no avail. As the patient feral cat waited for a passing mouse, he seemed frozen in place prior to his pounce. I waited and waited for for my waiter, but I just had to get out of my waders.
The past participle of "wait" is "waited." For example, "I have waited for hours for the bus to arrive."
No one waited.
It is an adverb qualifying the verb waited.
I think it is 'wait' itself
The sentence "It will being waited" is a mixture of tense forms and is therefore not correct.'waited' is the past participle of wait. The past participle is used for past tense, the passive tense, the perfect tenses or as an adjective.'It will' is future.'being' is the present participle of 'be'Depending on what the sentence is intended to mean, some alternatives might be:In general situations:-It will wait.It is waiting.It waited.It was waiting.It had been waiting.It will be waiting.It will have been waiting. ("If I get to I get the bus station in the next 15 minutes, and the bus is still waiting, it will have been waiting for me for more than an hour.")In a restaurant:-It is being waited upon. (e.g. a table in a restaurant)It will be waited on.It was being waited on... ("The table was actually being waited on when the legs collapsed!")
"We waited" is a past tense verb phrase.
Waited is the homophone of weighted.
Simple Subject= You Simple predicate= waited