The conjugations of the verb are
eat /eats
is eating / are eating
has been eating / have been eating
have eaten
ate
was eating / were eating
had been eating
had eaten
will eat
will be eating
will have been eating
will have eaten
So the verb forms are eat, eats, eating, ate, and eaten.
The noun form is eater. Another noun is eatery.
Combined and idiomatic phrases include eat in, eat out, eat away (at), eat and run, eat crow, eat dirt, eat my dust, eat your heart out, eat humble pie, eat his lunch, eat like a bird, eat like a horse, eat like a pig, eat your words, eat my shorts (Bart Simpson), eating out of my hand, eaten alive, eating us out of house and home, eat up, eat them up, eating it up, eating disorder, eat drink and be merry, and eating into one's savings.
Eat singular form
No, the word 'eat' is a verb, a word for an action.The noun forms of the verb to eat are eater, eats(a plural uncountable noun), and the gerund, eating.
The infinitive form of verbs in English is the uninflected form - the 'to' form. All the finite forms (those forms that are inflected by number, person, voice, mood, and tense) are derived from it. For example: To eat (infinitive). He eats; We will eat; They had eaten; I shall not eat; You ate; She would be eating (all these are finite forms).
solidfy is one. that's all i know.
Beans, grains, and nuts are all forms of seeds.
136 if you consider all word forms of "prepare"
Yes, in all respects of the word.
Here are all the formsBelieveBelievesBelieverBelieversBelievedBelievableBelievablyBelievinglyBelievabilityBelievabilitiesThere is one online dictionary source which claims also believableness, but I
I'm assuming you meant "What scientists study all forms of life?" The answer is biologists (the root word "bio" means "life").
Plants require sunlight to grow. Other forms of life eat plants.
That we use the exact same word in all present, past and past perfect forms.
The word that forms with "dwassho" is "shadow."