English, asked by dhineshpraveen, 1 month ago

simple present tense rule please answer me​

Answers

Answered by sanjudnath
4

Explanation:

In the simple present, most regular verbs use the rootform, except in the third-person singular (which ends in -s). For a few verbs, the third-person singular ends with -es instead of -s. Typically, these are verbs whose root formends in o, ch, sh, th, ss, gh, or z.

Answered by AmeliaRobinson
0

Answer:

The formula for simple present tense when the Third Person is Singular is that the sentence starts with He, She, Common noun or proper noun, then a verb in its base form with added 's' or 'es' according to the verb followed by an object which is optional

S+V+(s/es) for 3rd person singular

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