The usage of the third person singular simple present tense of action verbs

The usage of the third person singular simple present tense of action verbs


The basic usage of the general present tense of action verbs is as follows:
1. Regular actions, habits, and present state
Every day a lot of people speak English
2. It refers to the actions of cars, ships, planes, etc. according to the schedule
The flight to Guangzhou takes off at 8:30 in the morning
3. In adverbial clauses expressing the future, use the simple present tense
We'll have a big get together when we meet again some years later
4. In indirect speech, sentences expressing objective facts and truth are still in the present tense
It was said long ago that the earth goes around the sun



The subject of the present tense is the third person singular verb followed by es


He watches TV on weekends.
She goes to work by bus.
My mother washes clothes on Sunday.



When the subject of the present tense is the third person singular, what is the verb like by adding - s or - es at the end of the verb to give an example?


1)The moon moves round the earth..
Shanghai lies in the east of China
The verb is the prototype of the verb. They are move, lie, s or es, according to the prototype of the word
I hope it will be useful to you



When the subject is the third person singular, the verb should add "s"
School begins at nine.
School at three.
Why should "s" be added to "begins ends" in these two sentences


School can be regarded as it, that is, the third person singular



When the single subject is the third person singular, the verb should be in the form of the third person singular
When the single subject is the third person singular, the verb should be in the form of the third person singular


There are three types of sentences: 1. Be verb sentence, 2. Notional verb sentence, 3. Modal verb sentence. Among them, only notional verb sentence should tighten the nerve, tell your students that speaking abstractly is not good, and do more exercises



Write the third person singular and present participle forms of the following verbs
Third person singular present participle
go ____________ ________
wash ____________ ________


goes,going
washes,washing



Change the following verbs into the third person singular
Win, clean, break, write, cath, collect, wash, brush, buy, come, sit, jump, listen, talk,


wins
cleans
breaks
writes
caths
collects
washes
brushes
buys
cones
sits
jumps
listens
talks
Do you have an English grammar book



When does the verb after the singular third person in English add s or es?
Does it not include questions?


When the tense of a sentence is the present tense, the singular number of the third person should be added with s or es
General questions or negative sentences are no exception, but they are not written out in the sentence because the third person is reflected in the auxiliary verb of the sentence. You can see that if the third person is singular in the question, the auxiliary verb must be does



For the verbs after the third person singular in English, which verbs need to add es at the end? For example, sh. what else?


1. General verb plus s
2. Verbs ending in X, s, SH, CH, O and adding es. For example, fix - fixes, brush - brushes, watch watches, go goes
3. If the verb ends with a consonant letter and y, change y to I, and then add y es.study -studies
4. Special have - has, be - is / am
In adverbial clauses, the general present tense is used. When the subject is the third person singular, the verb uses the third person singular
He goes to school by bus.Kitty brushes her teeth every day.
If it doesn't rain,we will go to the park tomorrow.



When do verbs in English sentences add s, es
Which of these sentences is right?
1.The student is playing ball
2.The student are playing ball
3.The students is playing ball
4.The students are playing ball
Is there any definition?


The third person and singular (he / she / it or John, Mary, etc.) are generally used in the present tense
In the example, 1 and 4 are both correct
This is to use the form of be + verb present participle (- ing) to express "what is being done, what is going on"
The verb be must be based on the subject
I (am)
we / they (are)
The singular and plural are the same
he / she (is)