The second form of "teach" is "taught."
The noun form of "teach" is "teacher."
Teach is a verb and so has no superlative form.
The adjective form of "teach" is "teachable."
The past participle form of "teach" is "taught."
"Teach" is the singular form of the verb, while "teaches" is the third person singular form. "Teach" can also be used as the plural form when referring to a group of teachers collectively, such as "the teach of the school."
What do you think? They annoy teach! By Me the 2nd.
The past form of "teach" is "taught" and the past participle form is also "taught."
Taught is the past tense of "to teach".
1st form: Think 2nd form: Thought
No, the word 'teach' is a verb, a word for a process of imparting knowledge or skill.The abstract noun form of the verb to teach is the gerund, teaching.
The abstract noun form of the verb to 'teach' is the gerund, teaching; a word for the process of imparting knowledge.
There is no plural form of the word "teach," which is a verb.For plural subjects, use teach. (we teach, you teach, they teach).For singular subjects in the 3rd person, the form is teaches (he, she teaches).For the slang word for "teacher", the plural could be "teachs."