2 and 3/16 miles
1 hm is 10 times 1 dam, so you would be walking faster if you walked 1 hm in 10 min.
4 km/day x 180 days x 1000 m/km = 720,000 meters
I didn't. You did all the walking.
Her speed is w/W km/hour.
mph is a rate, not a time. if you walk at 3 mph for 6 miles, you were walking for 2 hrs. if u walk for 6hrs @ 3mph, you walked 18 mi
The gerund form of "walked" is "walking." It functions as a noun and indicates the action of walking.
it was raining
it was raining
You have been walking is present tense and you walked is past
You are walking.
They are Simple Tense past, present and future......as in walked, walk and will walk. Continuous past and present. as in was walking and am walking Perfect present, as in have walked Perfect continuous, as in have been walking
This is the answer to the question "How far can you walk into the woods?" If you keep walking after you have walked half way in, you are walking out.
Went walking
This is the answer to the question "How far can you walk into the woods?" If you keep walking after you have walked half way in, you are walking out.
Walk/walks is the present tense of walked. Walking is the present participle.
No. Walking is the present participle of walk, it can be used to show past or present tense eg I was walking to the pool when I met Jack. -- past The boys are walking to the beach. -- present
To correct a fused sentence, one uses a method of either separating or joining the independent clauses. You can join them by using a conjunction, such as 'and', 'or' or 'but', as well as using correlative conjunctions, like 'neither...nor' or 'not only...but also.' You can separate them by using a punctuation that ends a sentence, like a question mark or a period. Example: "I walked the dog while it was raining we both got wet." Correction: "I walked the dog while it was raining. We both got wet." or Correction: "I walked the dog while it was raining and we both got wet." Hope that helps! ^^