Either of those could be used, depending upon what you are trying to say. For example, you have a test that is supposed to contain 20 questions but it actually has only 19 questions; there is a missing question. You take a test and answer every question correctly except for one; you have a missed question.
It can be. To miss is a verb, but its participles (missing, missed) may be adjectives. Examples: The team failed to score, and they had many missed opportunities. The missing man was found the following day.
The spelling is "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" (just missing the second r). (see related question)
"i missed you so much this weekend"
It means that they missed you. They wished that you were there.
true
To clarify, please provide more context or detail about what noun is missing in order to assist you effectively with your question.
You'll have to be more specific in your question as to what has, will, or might be missed. For example, the consequences between missing a payment and missing a period are vastly different.
The present perfect tense of "missing" is "have/has missed."
I missed you so much! You missed the spelling exam. How could you have missed the concert!
The missing boy is correct. "Missing" is typically used to describe a person who cannot be found, while "missed" is used to convey the feeling of longing for someone's presence.
Yes, missed is a verb (miss, misses, missing, missed). Missed is also an adjective. Example uses: Verb: I'm late because I missed the bus. Adjective: That was a missed opportunity.
No, it is not. the word miss is a title, a noun (not a hit), or a verb (to not hit a target, or to feeling longing).
portia is missing out from the team reunion
well maybe hes been missing you so why dont you ask him if hes been missing you then if he says yes then you tell him you been missing him
im sorry but this is not a complete question. are you asking how many days after missing your period should you test for pregnacy? please post a complete question and i will try my hardest to to help you. best of luck .prayer is power.
The present tense of "missed" is "miss." For example: "I miss you."
It can be. To miss is a verb, but its participles (missing, missed) may be adjectives. Examples: The team failed to score, and they had many missed opportunities. The missing man was found the following day.