It's called displacement. Say you have a closed irregular object. It takes up space. Dunk it in water and it displaces the water. Finding out how much water was displaced tells you how much space the object took up. That's the volume =P.
Verbs are the words in a sentence that tell about the action and when the action took place. Eg:see - present/now, saw - pastAdverbs add extra information about a verb they tell us things like how or what manner something is done.He walks to school everyday. - verb is walk.He walks slowly to school everyday. - adverb is slowly it tells us how he walks.ALSO the correct question is: what are verbs and adverbs. Use are because the words verbs and adverbs are plural (more than one).What is a verb? Here the word verb means only one so you can use is.
I don't know what you mean by the second form. Take is present tense. The past tense is took, and the past participle is taken.
It is 20 multiple choice question survey that takes about 10 minutes. It is taken after the program, versus a baseline survey which is taken before the program. The endline survey measures how much has changed since the first time you took the baseline survey.
Algebra. I took it in that order, and to do most of the geometry, you HAVE to know algebra. If I had taken geometry first, I would have failed. ALGEBRA FIRST.
"Taken" is an irregular verb, "Take, took, taken." If it were regular it would be "Take, taked, taked".
The past tense of take is took. The past participle is taken.
irregular If it were regular, it would be take, taked, taked instead of take, took, taken.
Taken is an irregular verb. Taken is the past participle of the verb 'take'. If the verb was regular, then the past tense of 'take' would be 'taked' whereas instead it's took and taken.
Here are some examples of irregular verbs: Go (went) Eat (ate) Take (took) Break (broke) Swim (swam)
The verbs classifications are regular and irregular. There are a large number of irregular verbs in English.Regular : move-moved, slip-slipped, kill-killed, spell-spelledIrregular: see-saw, take-took, buy-bought, do-did, have-had, swim-swam, keep-kept, go-went, throw-threw
Yes, if it were completely regular, its past tense would be 'taked' rather than 'took'. 'Taken' is the past participle of the verb, and the past participle is a place where regular has a different kind of meaning. The form it takes does roughly qualify as regular.
The past tense is the irregular form took.The past participle is taken. As in "He has takenthe money."
1. The second form of an irregular verb (you find it in the list of irregular verbs or in any dictionary).2. You add the suffix -ED for to all regular verbs (to the Infinitive or first form).3. It is used mainly to describe an action which took place at a certain moment in the past; it usually is accompanied by an Object of Time (the moment when the action occurred).Markers like last, past, ago require a Past Tense, just like phrases like in January, on Monday (last Monday, of course), during the 17th century, at 4 o clock, etc.
Yes, a verb that ends in -ED in the past tense (second form usually shown) and in the past participle (the third form shown) is a regular verb.For example: to play, played, playedSome verbs retain an older T form as well as the -ED form (to dream, dreamed or dreamt).Other verbs are irregular and must be learned individually.For example: to take, took, taken / to see, saw, seen / to steal, stole, stolen / to keep, kept, kept
In languages such as English, in which verbs are conjugated, regular verbs are conjugated in a regular or consistent way, while irregular verbs do not follow an obvious pattern in their conjugation. For example, in English the way to conjugate a regular verb is to add -ed to the past tense, and -ed to the past participle, e.g. "to kick" kick (present tense), kicked (past tense), and (had) kicked (past participle, i.e. "he had kicked him"). Irregular verbs, which are the ones which are used most often in English do not show this pattern. Examples are "sing, sang, sung" and "think, thought, thought." An especially irregular verb in English is "to be" which has the forms "is, was, (had) been," and the present tense of this verb is also irregular in person and number, e.g. "I am, you are, he/she is, we are, you are, they are." Most verbs do not show any difference between the 1st person ("I"), and the second person ("you") in the verb forms. The verb "to go" is also quite irregular, "go, went, gone." Most verbs in European languages show this distinction between irregular and regular verbs.
The past tense of the irregular verb "to take" is "took."