No, it is not. It is a verb. It is the irregular past tense of the verb to swim (swim-swam-swum).
"Mihin sen swam English channel?" - "To which did s/he swim the English channel?"
you said it correctly
in on about above beyond through over under around by into onto
No, then is not a preposition. It is a conjuction.Than is a preposition.
At is a preposition. Anything that can be ___ the box is a preposition. For Example: At the box.
"Mihin sen swam English channel?" - "To which did s/he swim the English channel?"
The nouns in the sentence are:fish, subject of the sentencesea, object of the preposition 'under'
Anna and she swam in the pool. It is easy to remember when you can state the sentence as: Anna swam in the pool. She swam in the pool (not: Her swam in the pool), so combined they would be Anna and she swam in the pool.
The past tense is swam. (I swam, you swam, they swam) The past participle is swum. Present perfect : he has swum Past perfect : he had swum Future perfect: he will have swum
Swam is one syllable.
swam!!
SWAM is the past tense of the verb "to swim". For example, "I swam ten laps of the pool this morning".
He swam in the sea of diamonds
I swam across the river yesterday.
swam
It isn't even a word, but swam is. swam is also a verb.
Swims is already plural. The singular is swim.