"You have begun" is correct.
The correct form of the verb "promise" in the sentence "He did as he promised." is already correct.
The correct form of the verb to complete the sentence is "show" – The tapes on the table show to me.
The correct form is When did I come? (I did come when).
no, the verb that comes after will is always verb 1 !
No, the correct form is "Is she correct?" The subject (she) comes before the verb (is) in English sentence structure.
The correct form of the verb "promise" in the sentence "He did as he promised." is already correct.
The verb in that sentence is "take". It's not the correct form, though. The correct form is "takes".
The correct phrase is "It will begin." The word "will" is a modal verb that requires the base form of the main verb, which in this case is "begin." "Will began" is incorrect because "began" is the past tense form of the verb.
The sentence is correct exactly the way it is: "One of these disks is for you and Adam." "Is" is the correct form of the verb "to be" in this sentence, because its subject is "one," which takes the singular form of the verb. Note that if the sentence had started with "these disks," that would require a plural verb, and the correct form would be "These disks are for you and Adam."
The verb in this sentence is the word "is." When you use the verb "to be," you must use the correct form of it.
The correct form of verb of the sentence "This property is for sale, sell" is "sale".
The correct form of the verb to complete the sentence is "show" – The tapes on the table show to me.
No, sat is a verb - the past tense of sit. You can begin a sentence with a verb if it is an imperative sentence but then the verb is in the base form not past. eg Sit down! Look out. Clean up your room.
The correct form is When did I come? (I did come when).
no, the verb that comes after will is always verb 1 !
The correct verb form is: will be moved
No, the correct form is "Is she correct?" The subject (she) comes before the verb (is) in English sentence structure.