Can the past tense of the notional verb be used with am, is, are? Can the prototype of the notional verb be used with the past tense of be? What tense are they?

Can the past tense of the notional verb be used with am, is, are? Can the prototype of the notional verb be used with the past tense of be? What tense are they?


1. Yes
No, unless the original form is the same as the past tense



Is it OK to add the past tense after the be verb
such he was arrived,or he was died


No, your example is wrong. The verb be is followed by an adjective, he was dead, which means a state, or he arrived, or he dead
The job is done by Tom



On the past tense of be verbs am, is, are, was and were. I already know that was and were are the past tense of the former
Now you can simply understand the usage of was and were, only when there is a clear time prompt
I would like to ask if there are any other special usages of was and were, or how to use was and were without a clear time prompt?


To be clear about what has happened, use the past tense
Context cues are also OK
In addition, if the subjunctive clause is a be verb, we must use were



The antonym of day
Is it night? Why?


Day and night



The antonym of day, evening or night


Day, evening, night
Choose night



Write 10 groups of simple adjective antonyms in English


tall/short
fat/thin
old/young
small/big
happy/sad
white/black
bright/dark
light/heavy
good/bad
rich/poor



The comparative degree of the antonym sloppy,


tidier



Turn on antonym
English Antonyms


turn off



Antonym of turn on
sdfdsf


turn off



Negative form of will? Plural of child? Plural of tomato? Antonym of a little? Antonym of forget? Adjective of wind? Quick


won't
children
tomatoes
a few
remember
windy
quicky