The subject of the sentence "She crept past the baby's crib" is "She," and the verb is "crept." The sentence describes the action of the subject moving quietly past the crib. The phrase "past the baby's crib" serves as a prepositional phrase providing additional context.
The past participle of "crept" is "crept." It remains the same in both the past tense and past participle forms.
infinitive: creep past: crept past participle: crept
The past tense and past participle of creep are crept.
Crept is the past tense and the past participle of the verb to creep.
The past tense of "creep" is "crept".
Crept is already the past tense of creep.
infinitive: creep past: crept past participle: crept
Crept is a verb. It is past tense of creep.
No, crept is the preterite (simple past tense) and past participle of the verb to creep.
Crept is a verb. It's the past tense of creep.
Crept.
Creep is present tense. The past tense is crept.