joined, join, join
The three forms of the verb "target" are: the base form "target," the past tense "targeted," and the past participle "targeted." In a sentence, you might say, "We will target the new audience," "We targeted the market last year," and "The campaign has targeted several demographics."
Category is not a verb. Categorize is a verb its forms are: categorize categorizes categorized categorizing
The three verbals are gerunds, participles, and infinitives. Gerunds are verb forms that end in "-ing" and function as nouns (e.g., "Running is fun"). Participles are used as adjectives and can be in present (ending in "-ing") or past (often ending in "-ed" or irregular forms) forms (e.g., "The broken vase was on the table"). Infinitives are the base form of a verb, typically preceded by "to" (e.g., "to run").
The verb forms are access, accesses, accessing, accessed. The verb access is an action verb (a verb for an act).
The noun forms of the verb to succeed is succeeder (one who succeeds) and the gerund, succeeding.Related noun forms are success and succession.
The three forms of the verb "to be" are: is, am, are.
were, are,will be
There are three progressive verb forms in English: present progressive (am/is/are + verb-ing), past progressive (was/were + verb-ing), and future progressive (will be + verb-ing).
a. noun b. verb c. auxiliary verb
The Three verb form of Judge are 1) judge 2) Judging 3) Judged
1- primary 2-modal 3-marginal
Joined is a verb as it makes part of the verb to join. It's the preterite form of that verb.
Why did you join this college? (You did join this college why?)Why - adverb, modifies the verb 'did join';did - auxiliary verb;you - personal pronoun, subject of the sentence;join - main verb;this - adjective, describes the noun 'college';college - noun, direct object of the verb 'did join'.
Joined is a past tense verb.
The verb "have" has three primary forms: "have," "has," and "had." "Have" is used with the subjects I, you, we, and they, while "has" is used with he, she, and it. "Had" is the past tense form used for all subjects. These forms are also used in perfect tenses to indicate completed actions.
The present forms of the verb "to have" are: I have You have He/she/it has We have They have
yes, for example 'He may have done it', or 'He should have been writing' which contains four verb forms