eat - ate
The verb "read" becomes its own past tense when rearranged to "dare."
The verb "read" becomes its own past tense, "read," by rearranging its letters.
To change a verb from present tense to past tense, usually you add "-ed" to the end of the verb. For example, "to have" in present tense becomes "had" in past tense.
The past tense of the verb "can" (meaning be able) is could.The past tense of the verb "can" (meaning preserve in containers) is canned.
This is how you form the past tense of regular verbs.
The verb "read" becomes its own past tense when rearranged to "dare."
As far as I know there is no such thing as the verb "are"; it is one of the present tense forms of the verb to be, which in the past tense becomes "were".You are > You were.
Yes, it is a form of the verb "to rearrange" (change order or arrangement). It is the past tense and past participle of the verb, and can also be used as an adjective.
The verb "read" becomes its own past tense, "read," by rearranging its letters.
To change a verb from present tense to past tense, usually you add "-ed" to the end of the verb. For example, "to have" in present tense becomes "had" in past tense.
The past tense of the verb "can" (meaning be able) is could.The past tense of the verb "can" (meaning preserve in containers) is canned.
Change the past tense form of the verb to the present tense. For example. "I ran" becomes "I run"
This is how you form the past tense of regular verbs.
Yes, that is correct for regular verbs in English. When the verb ends in -e, you simply add -d to form the past tense. For example, the verb "dance" becomes "danced" in the past tense.
No. The past tense version of have is had. Example: I had 2 dollars, but I spent it on gum.
The past tense of the verb 'am' is 'was' or 'were.' The verb 'am' is derived from the verb 'to be.'
The past tense verb for "do" is "did."