No! The present perfect is formed with the past participle, not the past indicative; therefore, "has eaten" would be correct.
"He ate slowly" is correct. Adverbs such as "slowly" are used to describe verbs that show how the action is performed, such as eating in this case.
The correct spelling is chimney.An example sentence is: "Santa ate so many pies that he got stuck in the chimney".
Their grandfather baked cookies, and the children ate them all.
You can change "affection" into an adjective by adding the suffix "-ate," resulting in "affectionate."
No, It would be "The dog has eaten," or "The dog ate."Eat is the present tense. You want to match the tenses. If the dog is presently eating, you could say, "The dog eats." But if you are referring to the past eating behavior of the dog, it is as above, the dog has eaten, or the dog ate. I eat, you eat, they eat, is all present tense. Ate and eaten are both past tense, I have eaten, or I ate, etc.
"He ate slowly" is correct. Adverbs such as "slowly" are used to describe verbs that show how the action is performed, such as eating in this case.
Yes, "you ate your soup" is correct. Both as a statement and a question.
No. The correct form is "I shouldn't have eaten that."
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If I am correct it was Homer Simpson
Correct
You ate an Oreo cookie. since there is a vowel in the start of "Oreo" there needs to be a consonant. for example an instead of a.
Ate is a past tense verb while eaten is not
Altough the question is not clear, the answer is definitely wrong. If question is trying to ask if some people have eaten, proper question should be "Have they eaten?" No way would are ate ever be correct,
The correct spelling is "whole" as in "He ate a whole turkey."
You spelled it correctly: dining
Because the correct pronunciation of that word is " in-GRAY-she-ATE ". Count 'em.