The emphatic forms of a verb are often used to give greater emphasis to the idea express by the verb. The auxiliaries do, does and did are used to give this additional emphasis. The emphatic forms are used in only two tenses, the present tense and the past tense.
The phrase would be two words "be gained" (e.g. what is to be gained by..)The past tense of the verb to begin is "began."The past tense of the verb to bargain is "bargained."
The word benefit can be a noun (with two major meanings) or a verb (to give a benefit or advantage). The verb forms are to benefit (infinitive), benefits (third person, singular present tense), benefiting (present participle), benefited (past tense and past participle)..
Yes, "taught" is a verb, as it is the past tense of the verb "to teach."Example sentence- My parents taught me how to ride a bike.However, "taught" has a homophone, "taut," so it is important to make sure that you are not confusing the two. While "taught" is the past tense of the verb "to teach," "taut" means tightly drawn, tense, or strained.
Yes, it is the past tense and past participle of the verb 'to found'. 'Benjamin Britten founded the Aldeburgh Festival.' The past tense and past participle of the verb 'to find' is 'found'. 'They found the answer to their question by visiting the library.' Two completely unconnected verbs - do not confuse them!
perfect and imperfect
The past progressive tense has two forms: simple past progressive (e.g., "I was reading") and past perfect progressive (e.g., "I had been reading"). Both forms indicate an ongoing action in the past.
Learned and learnt are two past tense forms of the verb "learn." Both are commonly used in American and British English, respectively.
'Operation' is a noun not a verb, so it cannot have a past tense. A verb related to 'operation' might be operated, in which case the past tense would be be the same: operated. You could convey past tense though by adding did opreate, or had operated, but these are complex past tenses (with two verb forms).
There are two forms of the present perfect tense: simple present perfect (I have eaten) and progressive present perfect (I have been eating). Both forms use "have" or "has" with the past participle of the main verb to indicate an action that started in the past and has relevance to the present.
was = singular - He was sick last weekwere = plural - They were sick last week
The two classifications for verbs based on the way they form the past tense and past participle are regular and irregular verbs. Regular verbs form their past tense and past participle by adding "-ed" to the base form. In contrast, irregular verbs do not follow a standard pattern and have unique forms for the past tense and past participle.
the past tense for 2 is 4
Two conjugated forms of the verb "to be" - was and were.You also require the present participle of your verb.For example, the past continuous tense of the verb "dance":I/He/She/It was dancing.You/We/They were dancing.
There is only one simple past tense.
Takes can be in the base form (take), past tense (took), or present participle (taking).
No. Raise and rise are two different verbs, and they are both present tense. The past tense of raise is raised. The past tense of rise is rose.