Yes, it is a form of the verb "to roam" (to move about or wander).
It is the past tense and the past participle of the verb.
"Who roamed" is not a verb phrase; it is a subject-verb combination where "who" is the subject and "roamed" is the verb. A verb phrase typically consists of a main verb along with auxiliary verbs or helping verbs.
No. It is the past tense of the verb to roam, but it cannot be used to describe something that roams. The other participle, roaming, can be an adjective.
Roamed is also the past participle.
The word "roamed" has one syllable.
there are two syllables in the word roamed
He roamed across streets for his lost puppy.
When Dinosaurs Roamed America was created in 2001.
The duration of When Dinosaurs Roamed America is 1.52 hours.
In the English language, a present-tense verb can be changed into a past-tense verb by ensuring that the verb ends with "-ed". If the verb ends with an "e", then all you need to do is add a "d" to the end. If the verb does not end with an "e", then "ed" must be added to the end of it. Since waste, smile, share and whistle end with an "e", only a "d" is needed to change them into: wasted, smiled, shared and whistled. As push, roam, want and appear do not end with an "e", then "ed" is added to change them into: pushed, roamed, wanted and appeared. To summarize: waste: wasted smile: smiled push: pushed roam: roamed want: wanted share: shared whistle: whistled appear:appeared
Once Giants Roamed the Earth was created in 2005.
some of the type of dinosaurs that roamed Vermont was the pegasoarus and the mighty T-Rex.
Yes, recent research suggests that Spinosaurus was likely a quadrupedal dinosaur when it roamed the Earth.