Yes. The word "does" is a form of the verb "to do" -- the present tense, third person singular: he does, she does, it does. It also takes this conjugation when it precedes the infinitive of another verb (He does run, he does sit, he does eat) or to ask a question (Does he drive?).
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I sit between Adam and James at school
All I know is that each person can sit on a chair. There aren't many ways with the details you said. There might be 2 chairs with 2 people on each chair. There really only is one way.
The nth root is unstoppable. You must sit back and wait. Hopefully you will survive it as it takes its deadly course.
Yes, "sit" is considered a base form of the verb. It is the present tense form, and its past tense form is "sat."
The infinitive form of "sit" is "to sit."
The plural of sit-in is sit-ins.
i am going to SIT down and answer your question
The passive form of "sit down" is "be sat down."
The future tense of the word "sit" is "will sit" or "shall sit" depending on the context. It is formed by adding the helping verb "will" or "shall" before the base form of the verb "sit."
The second form of "sit" is "sat" and the third form is also "sat."
The present perfect form of the verb 'sit' is 'have sat.'
The past perfect form of the verb "sit" is "had sat."
In emphatic sentences the subject of the sentence is not stated it is implied.eg Sit down. Be quiet. The subject is you. ie You sit down. You be quietThe form of the verb is the base form so for cost the form is cost. But it would be hard to write an emphatic sentence for cost.Another way of showing emphasis is to use - do + base verbI do help!
A sit-in or sit-down is a form of protest that involves occupying seats or sitting down on the floor of an establishment. It is a non-violent form of protesting.
Sit is already a verb. For example "to sit somewhere" is an action and therefore a verb.