what is the past form of through
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Answer:
Through is a preposition and an adverb. (It can also be used as an adjective). Threw is the past tense of 'throw'. The past participle is thrown.
Explanation:
There is no past tense of “through.” “Through” is an adverb, a word that modifies another word in place, time, etc., usually ending in “ly,” but not always. Only verbs have a past tense.
For example, in the sentence, “I’m going to the beautifully built building,” beautifully is the adverb.
Or, “I’m crossing through the building.”
So, to answer your question, if you wanted to make the sentence containing “through” past tense, you would have to make the verb past tense.
To make the sentence above past tense, you would make the verb, crossing, past tense.
How do you know which one is the verb? Whatever the subject of the sentence is doing. The subject, I, is crossing. “I” is not “throughing” (that’s not a word).
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Answered by
1
Explanation:
The past tense of go through is went through. The third-person singular simple present indicative form of go through is goes through. The present participle of go through is going through. The past participle of go through is gone through or been through.
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