Preach is a regular verb so the past participle is preached
The past tense is preached.
address, exhort, advocate, teach, talk, deliver
The past participle form of "preach" is "preached." For example, "He has preached at that church for many years."
Peter preached his first sermon in Jerusalem on the day of Pentecost, following the arrival of the Holy Spirit. This sermon is recorded in the New Testament in the book of Acts, chapter 2.
No, the word 'preach' is a verb, meaning to proclaim or put forth in a sermon; to advocate or to urge acceptance publicly.The noun forms of the verb to preach are preacher and the gerund, preaching.
No, "preach" is a verb that means to speak or deliver a sermon or religious teachings. A noun form related to this verb is "preacher," which refers to someone who delivers religious teachings or sermons.
You did spell preach correctly.
The verb for preacher is preach.Other verbs depending on the tense are preaches, preaching and preached.Some example sentences are:"I will preach it this weekend"."The preaches about why we must recycle"."I am preaching about the importance of recycling"."He preached about why we must do what we can to help the Earth".
The best sermon is to live it, not to preach it.
Always practice what you preach.
Hitler didn't preach
Women Can preach
Practice What You Preach was created on 1989-08-08.
Do you have the required license to preach in your community?
Preach is a regular verb so the past participle is preached
sojourner truth would preach on the streets and at local gatherings