Sale is a noun; and sell is a verb. Examples: "I made a sale." "Did you sell your car yet?"
There is no future tense of sale because the word sale is a noun. ("I made a sale with the cash register" or "There's a sale on at the store."You may be trying to ask: what is the future tense of the word sell, which is a verb. For future tense, you would say "I will sell my car" or "I am going to sell my car." or even "I'm selling my car tomorrow."So for the future, it is the same word as in the present tense, but you must add "I will" or "I'm going to" before the word sell in order to make it future tense.If you meant to ask about the future tense of the word sail, as in on a sail boat, you would say "I will go sailing tomorrow" or more commonly "I'm going sailing tomorrow."You're Welcome
The correct form of verb of the sentence "This property is for sale, sell" is "sale".
"Contract of sell" is just "contract of sale" misspelled.
sell
Yes!
I would
first of all... why are you selling soup at a car boot sale..... but anyways, i would say about 10$
You could sell it at a car boot sale, an antique shop or an auction, it's up to you.
You can try eBay, Gumtree or Amazon for selling items on the internet. You can also sell items via renting a stall or selling from the boot of your car at car boot sales. In America a popular form of the car boot sale is a garage sale. This is when someone uses their garage and drive way to sell items that a householder no longer wants. Items can be up to date or old, in a new or used condition and safe.
you sell your mom by taking her to Texas border with a bunch of mexicans in a mini van.
Yes there is a Car boot on Monday at Blackburn college car park
You should sell it in a car boot sale for$123.45
Probably the meaning you are after is the storage area of a motor car. For example, a car-boot sale is where people take goods in the boot of their car, and sell them in a market, which might be a large car-park for example. In North America it is called a trunk.
no
car boot?
Midsomer Norton