For third person plural or plural noun subjects do not add -s to the verb
they swim
the boys swim
For third person singular and singular noun subjects add -s to the verb.
he swims
she swims
it swims
the dog swims
I is not a third person subject pronoun so no -s is added to the verb.
A compound predicate is a sentence with two or more predicates that share the same subject. For example, in the sentence "She sings and dances," the compound predicate is "sings and dances" because the subject "she" is doing both actions. Another example is "He runs, jumps, and swims," where "runs," "jumps," and "swims" are all part of the compound predicate.
Those are the present tenses. I swim every day.You swim every day.I learn from the teacher.You learn from the teacher.It changes to swims and to learns for He/She.
Laugh - He laughs at every joke. Sleep - I sleep for eight hours every night. Arrive - The train arrives at 7 p.m. Fall - The leaves fall from the trees in autumn. Swim - She swims in the ocean every morning.
The words "NOON" and "SWIMS" stay the same when flipped upside down.
Ducked is a verb (past tense for duck) which means to move quickly to avoid something. Example sentence: When the ball bounced off the rim toward the crowd, the whole left end of the bleachers ducked for cover.
The sailors swim to the ships.
a swimmer?
Yes, it is a form of the verb "to swim." It is the present tense, third-person singular conjugation (he/she/it swims).
In the example sentence, "Which fish in the aquarium swims the fastest?", the noun "fish" may be singular or plural. The noun "aquarium" is singular.The noun "fish" is an uncountable (mass) noun as a word for a food substance, but can be used as a count noun (fish, fishes) as a word for the creature (creatures).Example: How many fish are in your aquarium?Or: How many fishes are in your aquarium? (both sentences are correct)
she swims nicely
A person can very well swim in water. To be precise, a person can learn to do that.
Swimming is something when a person swims in a body of water.
A scuba diver.
1.5m/s
That the approach of the person often means food gets chucked into the tank. And if it swims to the top it gets first pick.
Swims is already plural. The singular is swim.
No, this statement is not true. When a person swims through water, work is being done because the person is exerting a force to move their body through the water against resistance. Work is calculated as force multiplied by distance, so swimming does involve work.