English, asked by kumidhinimanchika792, 9 months ago

Verbs Exercises with Answers – Worksheet Fill in the blanks with the appropriate form of the verb given in the bracket. 01. He _______ (want) to become an IAS officer. 02. Raju _______ (go) to market yesterday. 03. Latha _______ (weep) bitterly on her father’s death. 04. I have ______ (complete) my homework just now. 05. Ramya _______ (be) a student. 06. Maggie has _______ (bring) a new car. 07. We had ______ (reach) the airport by 9 O’clock. 08. She _____ (pass) her SSC in 2008. 09. Sita was cooking when I ______ (go) to the office. 10. They had already ______ (arrive) when we ______ (reach) there. 11. I will ______ (pass) the examination this time. 12. We _______ (be) students. 13. It has just _____ (rain). 14. He _____ (draw) it very well. 15. They _______ (catch) the thieves very bravely. 16. She _____ (has) her breakfast. Then she ______ (leave) for the college.17. They sometimes ______ (watch) movies. 18. Raj ______ (meet) his family last year. 19. Rain ______ (be) the important source of water. 20. She ______ (fall) asleep while she was watching TV.

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
44
  • wants
  • went
  • weeped
  • completed
  • is
  • brought
  • reached
  • passed
  • went
  • arrived , reached
  • pass
  • are
  • rained
  • drew
  • caught
  • had
  • left
  • watch
  • met
  • is
  • fell

Hope this helps you my dear mate ✔️✔️✌️✌️❤️❤️

Answered by steffiaspinno
11

1. wants

2. went

3. wept

4. completed

5. is

6. brought

7. reached

8. passed

9. was, went

10. arrived, reached

11. passs

12. are

13. rained

14. drew

15. caught

16. had, left

17. watch

18. met

19. is

20. fell

Verb

The component of a phrase that tells us what the subject does is called a verb. The heart of an English phrase is a verb.

There are three tenses:

Past, present, and future.

Past:

Things that have already occurred are described as past.

Present tense:

It is used to depict events that are currently taking place are present.

Future:

Things that have not happened yet are described as the future tense.

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