How do you use Tooken in a sentence?
How do you use Tooken in a sentence?
“Get your chain tooken, I may do it myself – I’m so Brooklyn.” “Or have I “tooken” the wrong lesson away from this whole discussion?” “How many citizens native and chicano will probly get pulled over and searched and tooken to jail for weed or no insurance petty crimes.”
Was taken or is taken?
Simple tenses: “He is taken” is the passive voice of the simple present tense. “He was taken” – passive of the simple past tense (imperfect). “He will be taken” – passive of future tense.
Why did you take or?
The first one is correct. “Did you take your dinner?” When making questions (and negations) in past tense, you need to use the auxiliary verb “to do”, which is then in past tense, and the main verb is in bare infinitive form (form of infinitive without “to”).
Did u eat your dinner?
“Have you eaten dinner” is a perfectly understandable and grammatically correct question. However, there are other ways to say it: “Have you had dinner?” is a little more conversational. Someone who ate dinner may still want a meal, and conversely, someone who skipped dinner may not feel like eating.
Is it I have ate or I have eaten?
In standard English, the past participle form of eat is always eaten. Ate is the simple past form. In the perfect tenses, which are indicated by has, had and have, you will always use eaten, even in questions where has, had or have has moved to the front of the sentence away from the verb: I eat, we eat, Jeff eats.
Did you have your food meaning?
However, it might interest you to know it is not the way a native English speaking would ask that question. We’d be more likely to say “Did you eat your food?” or “Have you eaten?” (a meal) or “Have you had anything to eat?” (a meal or a snack)—usually a way of asking, “Are you hungry?” 804 views.
Are you back yet meaning?
Colloquially, I would say ” Are you back yet?” or your variant in no. 1. You ask this question to your friend if you don’t actually know for sure whether she is back or not but want to know. It could be used when your friend contacts you and you are surprised as you were not expecting her back so soon.
Are you back to or in?
The correct usage is “I am back in [some city]”. The word “to” does not work with the verb “to be” in this context, since it’s used as a preposition that means “toward” or “in the direction of”. You cannot be to a location, but you can go to a location, as examples from other answers show.
Are you home yet meaning?
“Are you home yet?” is used to ask if someone has arrived at home.