The second person (the person spoken to) singularform is:
You shouldn't have done that.
You shouldnt hve done that...
"Is" is the correct present tense, third person singular form of the verb be.I am (first person singularWe are (first person plural)You are (second person singular and plural)He/She/It is (third person singular)They are (third person plural)Was/were is past tense.I wasWe wereYou wereHe/She/It wasThey were
The prefix "himself" means that the action is being done to or by the person that is male and singular. It emphasizes that the person is performing the action on or for himself.
(The form of the verb to be include is, 3rd person singular, and are, 2nd person singular, or any person plural.)She is doing her homework. The cat is on the sidewalk.They are doing their homework. The cats are on the sidewalk.We are doing our homework. Are you doing your homework? They are done with their homework.
Him (accusative case singular male 3rd person pronoun), as in, "I congratulated him for a job well done."
The short answer is, that's just the way it's done and anything else sounds incorrect. To get a bit more technical, it is simply one of the complicated rules governing the verb family "to be" or state-of-being, and the English language concept of "person". First person refers to myself ... second person refers to you ... third person refers to someone other than you or me. The state-of-being verbs are "is", "are", "am". Present tense (referring to the present time) correct usages: First person singular: "How amI? I am well, thank you." Second person: "How areyou? I hope you are well." Third person singular: "How is he?" "How is she?" "How is it?" So, saying "How is you?" or "How am you?" sounds illiterate because they use third- and first-person verbs in a second-person sentence. This is just the beginning; there are more rules for past, future, plural, etc. Like I said, state-of-being is a complicated part of the English grammar.
The phrase "Macht schnell" is an imperative and means "hurry up", or "Make it quick!" .In this example it is used in the second person plural form (used when speaking to more than one person).
holidays3rd person singular present, plural of hol·i·day Noun: A day of festivity or recreation when no work is done. Synonyms: vacation - recess - holiday - leave
Create is an action or thing that is done so it is a verb.
doesn't doesn't have a past participle.Doesn't is the negative form of do. It is used to make negative sentences with third person singular subjects or singular noun subjects.She doesn't like kimchi. - negative sentence third person pronoun subject.The dog doesn't like kimchi - negative sentence singular noun subject.The past participle of do is done. The negative is haven't done or hasn't done.She has done gymnastics for years. - positive sentence using past participle of do.He hasn't done gymnastics since last year. - negative sentence using past participle of do.Answer:Didn't.
Donatur is the Latin equivalent of 'Let it be given'. It's the form of the verb in the third person singular. It's in the present passive subjunctive of the infinitive 'donare', which means 'to give'.
Nothing. I'm pretty sure Bush hasn't done anything to improve the country. Also George Bush is one person and is therefore singular.