Are.
we are / they are / you are
Are is present tense.Are is called a be verb. It is a plural be verb when used with plural pronouns or plural subjects egWe are from Hamilton.Or it can be singular, when used with "you". You are late.More is not a verb so it does not show tense.
Yes. It is a present tense form (second person, or first and third person plural) of the verb 'to be'. You are. We are. They are.
Present tense plural is just the base form of the verb, no -s. argue. They (plural) argue all the time. She (singular) argues all the time.
The present form of the verb "be" is "am" for first person singular (I), "is" for third person singular (he/she/it), and "are" for plural (we/you/they).
No. it is not a verb. These is a pronoun (plural of this) and is used as an adjective.
Are is present tense.Are is called a be verb. It is a plural be verb when used with plural pronouns or plural subjects egWe are from Hamilton.Or it can be singular, when used with "you". You are late.More is not a verb so it does not show tense.
Yes. It is a present tense form (second person, or first and third person plural) of the verb 'to be'. You are. We are. They are.
The word "are" is a verb, the plural present tense form of the verb "to be."
Present tense plural is just the base form of the verb, no -s. argue. They (plural) argue all the time. She (singular) argues all the time.
The present form of the verb "be" is "am" for first person singular (I), "is" for third person singular (he/she/it), and "are" for plural (we/you/they).
No. it is not a verb. These is a pronoun (plural of this) and is used as an adjective.
The word "are" is a verb. It is the plural present tense of the verb to be. The singular form is the word "is."
No. The word "are" is a verb, or helper verb, a form of the verb "to be." It is the plural present tense (we are, you are, they are).
It is not called a plural verb but plural form. Verbs only have singular and plural forms in the present tense. The verb form must agree with the subject eg plural subject + plural verb form The baby crawls well now -- singular subject = baby, singular verb form = crawls The babies crawl well now -- plural subject = babies, plural verb form = crawl
The plural is "hisses." "Hisses" is also the present form of the verb "to hiss".
The plural form of the noun 'tune' is tunes.When used as a verb, the word 'tunes' is present tense, not a plural. Verbs do not have a plural form.
Are is a form of be verb. It is the present tense plural be verb.Be is the most irregular verb in English.