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What is the past-tense verb for be?

The verb is still "to be", regardless of the tense. It is an irregular verb, and the past tense forms are was for I and he/she/it, and were for we, you, and they.


What is the name of helping verbs that always keep the same form regardless of the subject?

verb


What is the noun of the word prove?

Prove is a verb : Sally proved to the jury that she was innocent. I belive perhaps you are looking for a synonym for the word prove, regardless though a verb is a verb is a verb--there exists no noun form for the word prove or any other verb that I am aware of


Are verbs in Vietnamese conjugated?

In Vietnamese, verbs are not conjugated based on the subject of the sentence. However, there are markers used to indicate verb tenses, aspects, and moods. The basic form of the verb remains the same regardless of the subject.


Is although a noun verb or adjective?

None of the above. Although is a conjunction. It is used to mean "regardless" or "even though."


The subject of a sentence is not changed by a...?

...prepositional phrase. The subject remains the same regardless of any prepositional phrases that may appear before it in the sentence.


Is became a plural?

The word 'became' is the past tense of the verb to become, which can be used with a singular or plural subject. Example sentence:He became the fist person in his family to graduate from college.


Is there a verb that remains the same in all tenses?

Put, cost, shut, cut, fit, hurt, quit, spread, knit, let, rid, set, shed, hit, slit, split, thrust.


What is 'feci' when translated from Italian to English?

"Feces" as a noun and "I did" or "I made" as a verb are literal English equivalents of the Italian word feci. Regardless of use as a feminine plural noun or as the first person singular of the remote past tense of the verb, the pronunciation remains "FEH-chee" in Italian.


What is the English translation of the Italian 'Guido'?

"I guide" as a verb or "Guy" as a noun are English equivalents of the Italian name Guido.Specifically, the verb guido means "(I) am driving, do drive, drive." The masculine noun Guido means "Guy." But regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation always is "GWEE-doh."


What is a past participle of let?

The verb "let", is one of those words that never change form, regardless of the verb tense. I.E. "He had let his friend borrow the car". Other words in this category include "hit" and "put".


What is the past tense of the french word magazine?

You can't make a past tense word out of a noun. Nouns stay the same regardless of time. Find a verb to make a past tense word out of.