Because 8 was hungry and ate 9. 7 ate 8. 6 ate 7. 5 ate 6. 4 ate 5. 3 ate 4. 2 ate 3. 1 ate 2. 0 ate 1 and -1 ate 0.
Adverbs tell how, when or where the action occurs. Example sentences: He ate quickly. (quickly is an adverb telling how he ate.) Yesterday he ate quickly. (yesterday is an adverb telling when he ate. At McDonald'syesterday, he ate quickly. ( At McDonald's is an adverbial phrase telling where he ate.)
Ate is an irregular verb.
Pawla has eaten 16 and Purrcy has eaten 24 pieces
because seven ate nine
The past participle of "ate" is "eaten."
"He wasn't very hungry; he had eaten earlier that day." "He wasn't very hungry, because he ate earlier." "He didn't eat much, 'cause he already ate." Choose one.
Eating is the present participle; eaten is the past participle.
Eaten is the past participle of eat, not the past tense. Ate is the past tense.
i have eaten
ate or has eaten.
She got eaten by the leeches because she ate a banana. The leeches smelled the banana, and therefore ate her.
It depends what you are talking about.If an animal eats another animal, then that animal is eating the plant that has already been eaten by the animal it ate.
The difference is under the rules of English grammar, "I have eaten" (the past participle form of the word "eat") makes sense, while "I have ate" (the simple past tense form of the word "eat) does not. "I ate" does make sense, however, and it has the same meaning as "I have eaten".
The simple past tense of "eat" is "ate" The past participel of "eat" is "eaten" The present tense of "eat" is I/you/we/they eat. He/she/it eats. The present participle is "eating"
ate
I jst ate it