contrary to popular belief, or whoever is telling you this. there has Never been a documented case in the united states where a trial lawyer has not has his bar exam credentials verified before he is able to take his first case.
Yes exempted is the past tense of exempt.
The past tense is missed you.
Missed is the past tense of miss.
miss coronado past winner was dolly . she help everyone . she is the miss coronado past winner .
The past participle of "miss" is "missed."
missed is the simple past tense had missed is the past perfect tense
Is there a list of past Miss Michigan title holders?
the ghost of christmas past was taking scrudge to show him his past.
The word "miss" can be in the present tense, past tense, or future tense depending on the context of the sentence. For example, "I miss you" is present tense, "I missed you" is past tense, and "I will miss you" is future tense.
missed (it is a normal verb: miss, missed, missed)
I know the MLB is exempt, I'm not sure about any others (simply because it's America's past-time, stupid I know).
It is perfectly regular: just add 'ed'. 'I have missed you while you have been away.'