Wiki User
โ 15y agoDove is correct!
Wiki User
โ 15y agoBoth "dove" and "dived" are correct past tense forms of the verb "dive." However, "dived" is more commonly used in British English, while "dove" is more commonly used in American English.
The word dove can be pronounced two different ways, depending on whether it is a verb form or a noun.The noun form is a bird name (dove, doves) and is pronounced with an "uh" sound (short U or schwa). It rhymes with glove, love, and shove.The verb form has a long O, as the past tense of dive (also dived). This form rhymes with the words cove and wove.
"Dove" is used to ask where something is located, for example "Dove sei?" (Where are you?). "Dov'รจ" is a contraction of "dove รจ" and is used to indicate where something specific is located, for example "Dov'รจ il bagno?" (Where is the bathroom?).
The phrase "di dove sei?" translates to "Where are you from?" in English.
The bird name (the noun "dove") has a short U (duv), rhyming with love and shove.The verb dove (past tense of to dive) has a long O sound, to rhyme with cove and wove.
In Japanese, "Kobato" (ใใฐใจ) translates to "small wings" or "dove".
That is one correct spelling of the past tense of to dive: dived or dove.
The past tense of "dive" would be "dived" or "dove".
Dove is the past tense of the verb dive.
dived isn't a real word
Dived is the past tense of dive. Dove is also acceptable.
dove No, have/has dived
The word dived is one form of the past tense of to dive, and the past participle.The other version of the past tense is dove.
Yes, the word 'dove' is a noun, a singular, common noun; a concrete noun as a word for a type of bird; an abstract noun for a person who opposes war or warlike policies. The word 'dove' is also the past tense of the verb to dive (dives, diving, dived, dove).
No. It's as quite as dove. Dove is considered a quote and gentle bird.
Analogical leveling is when speakers generalize amongst forms in a language--so if you have the strong verb drive-drove-driven, and you apply that form to the weak verb dive-dived-dived, you end up with some people who say dive-dove-dived. Usually it works the other way--strong verbs becoming weak--and there are other places where it appears, such as how English ended up with only one plural marker.
A young dove is formally called a squab. However people sometimes call them chicks too.
Analogical leveling is when speakers generalize amongst forms in a language--so if you have the strong verb drive-drove-driven, and you apply that form to the weak verb dive-dived-dived, you end up with some people who say dive-dove-dived. Usually it works the other way--strong verbs becoming weak--and there are other places where it appears, such as how English ended up with only one plural marker.