English, asked by abigailevans6694, 9 months ago

In Right Form of Verb , use of was

Answers

Answered by anushaBBPS
0

Answer:Forms of Verbs:

Base

Past

Past Participle

Present Participle

Gerund (noun)

Infinitive Do, work, love

Did, worked, loved

Done, worked, loved

Doing, working, loving

Doing, working, loving

To do, to work, to love be (am, is, are)

-  (was, were)

been

being

- - - -

to be have

had

had

having

 

to have

Note: Participles (without auxiliaries), infinitives, and gerunds do not work as the verb in a sentence. Gerunds work as nouns, but participles and infinitives work as adjectives/adverbs.

Rules:

Rule 1:

Subject-verb agreement: the verbs are customarily followed by the subjects, and they must agree with the subjects according to their number and person. See the rules of Subject-Verb Agreement.

Rule 2:

The variability of the verbs mostly depends on different tenses of the sentences. A form of verbs depends on the time the actions have been performed. See the structures and details of The Present Tense, The Past Tense, and The Future Tense.

Rule 3:

The verbs are also related to the structures of different sentences and clauses. A clause has only one verb. In fact, a clause cannot contain more than one finite verb but can have participles (without auxiliaries), infinitives, and gerunds.

Example:

I wanted (main verb) to go (infinitive) to the wedding.

Swimming(gerund) is(verb) a good exercise to keep (infinitive) your body fit and healthy.

Pray (verb) for the departed (past participle)

Don’t get(verb) down from a running(present participle) bus.

Rule 4:

Clauses can be connected by conjunctions and connectors. Some connectors take some specific forms of verbs. Conditionals use the conjunction if and it has some different sentence structures. See conditionals.

Rule 5:

The connector since has two usages.

If since is used to indicate a cause, the verbs of the two clauses will be of the same tense.

Example:

I didn’t go since you didn’t come.

Since you were busy, I didn’t disturb you.

If since is used to indicate time, the verb of the second clause will be different from the first.

Example:

We haven’t seen(present perfect) each other since he left(simple past).

It has been 20 years since he played football.

20 years passed(simple past) since we had met(past perfect).

I could not sleep well for a single night since you had left me.

Explanation:

Answered by zubaeralam74
0

Answer:i have a boy come from the orphanage

Explanation:

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