be polite smile and bold.
Both "spoke about" and "spoke of" are grammatically correct. However, "spoke about" is more commonly used in contemporary English.
I would have to say that the past tense of speak is "spoke". (ie I will speak now....... I spoke then)
Spoke is the past tense of speak.If speak was a regular verb we would say speaked. But we say spoke therefore speak is an irregular verb
The correct phrase to use is "spoke to." For example, "I spoke to her yesterday."
I spoke to... The prepositon TO must be used after the verbs TO SPEAK and TO TALK.
Both "spoke about" and "spoke of" are grammatically correct. However, "spoke about" is more commonly used in contemporary English.
Shakespeare spoke English, you would say 'our'.
I would have to say that the past tense of speak is "spoke". (ie I will speak now....... I spoke then)
We can say king Solomon spoke of wisdom as well.
Spoke is the past tense of speak.If speak was a regular verb we would say speaked. But we say spoke therefore speak is an irregular verb
The new testement doesn"t say he spoke in tongues. When ever it states that he spoke to the Father Jesus spoke in His native tongue.
His actions spoke, not his mouth.
10
french
They spoke Otomi language, but this is open to debate (fancy words to say no one knows for sure).
It means you spoke before you had all the information or before you thought carefully about whatever the topic was. You say this when you want to change what you just said and say something different.
Hablé con tu marido