Have be do. It and mine are pronouns
While using the passé composé, most verbs are conjugated with avoir. However, there are many verbs that are usually associated with "coming and going" that take the être form. Also, all reflexive verbs (like s'amuser or s'appelle) are conjugated using être in passé composé. Verbs in the past tense that take the être form must also agree with the subject of the sentence, by adding an e (feminine), s (masculine plural), or es (feminine plural) at the end of the verb, for example "Il est né" (He was born) or "Ils sont nés" (they were born) vs. "Elle est née" (She was born) or "Elles sont nées" (They were born) The list of verbs that take the être form is as follows:(The list is from the wikipedia page on the passe compose, it's not mine)devenir - to become - devenurevenir - to come back - revenumonter - to climb - montérester - to stay - restésortir - to exit - sortivenir - to come - venualler - to go - allénaître - to be born - nédemeurer - to abide - demeurédescendre - to descend - descenduentrer - to enter - entréretourner - to return - retournétomber - to fall - tombérentrer- to re-enter- rentréarriver - to arrive - arrivémourir - to die - mortpartir - to leave - partipasser - to pass by (this case only) - passédécéder - to decease
Subject pronouns: I, you, he, she, it, we, they Object pronouns: me, you, him, her, it, us, them Possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs
Gold mine in French is "mine d'or."
Belongs is a verb; pronouns replace nouns, not verbs. The noun form for belongs is belonging. Examples:The verb: That coat belongs to me.The noun: That coat is my belonging.The possessive pronoun: My belonging is on the floor because it's hanger broke.
Miner is not a verb so there is no root word.
Adverbs modify three things: verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs! Answer mine please? http://wiki.answers.com/Q/In_the_sentence_It_burned_last_night_is_night_an_adverb_that_modifies_when_It_burned_and_is_last_another_adverb_modifying_which_night&waAn=2
Do you mean...just different verbs? Exceed Sterilize Mine Jump Cross
Maintain, manage and march are three examples of regular verbs that begin with M.To give you some more, there is also mark, marry, measure, mention, mine, moan, move, murder and mutter.
Mine is in the auxiliary fuse box under the back seat on the right side.
No, you've is a contraction. You've is a combination of 'you have' and acts as the subject and verb (or auxiliary verb) in a sentence or phrase.
Strip mine Open-pit mine Shaft mine
It depends on your opinion. (Mine is the chocolate Milkshake) its chicken select
Select it from ur inventorys transportation tab
north korea
The personal pronoun I is in the subjectivecase.Examples:I had a piece of cake. (subject of the sentence)It was I who called the police. (predicate nominative)* The possessive case pronoun mine is used with both linking and action verbs.
While using the passé composé, most verbs are conjugated with avoir. However, there are many verbs that are usually associated with "coming and going" that take the être form. Also, all reflexive verbs (like s'amuser or s'appelle) are conjugated using être in passé composé. Verbs in the past tense that take the être form must also agree with the subject of the sentence, by adding an e (feminine), s (masculine plural), or es (feminine plural) at the end of the verb, for example "Il est né" (He was born) or "Ils sont nés" (they were born) vs. "Elle est née" (She was born) or "Elles sont nées" (They were born) The list of verbs that take the être form is as follows:(The list is from the wikipedia page on the passe compose, it's not mine)devenir - to become - devenurevenir - to come back - revenumonter - to climb - montérester - to stay - restésortir - to exit - sortivenir - to come - venualler - to go - allénaître - to be born - nédemeurer - to abide - demeurédescendre - to descend - descenduentrer - to enter - entréretourner - to return - retournétomber - to fall - tombérentrer- to re-enter- rentréarriver - to arrive - arrivémourir - to die - mortpartir - to leave - partipasser - to pass by (this case only) - passédécéder - to decease
The sandwich is mine, but the cookie is Lindsay's.