@yeetus
Another topic:
What's the past tense of "yeet"?
Another topic:
What's the past tense of "yeet"?
Yoot
Yote, are you uncultured
Yes
Lol. I stand by my yoot
Lol. I stand by my yoot
yet thyself away
It's "yeeted". Most English word's past tense is simply adding "-ed" to the end and there is no reason not to do so for "yeet"
It's "yeeted". Most English word's past tense is simply adding "-ed" to the end and there is no reason not to do so for "yeet"
What’s the past tense of skrrt skrrt
It would be skrrt-skrrted
OR is skrrt skrrt already past tense?
skreeting skreeting
Unlikely
skrrote skrrote
Most onomatopoeias' past tense is "-ed". The same should apply to "skrrt skrrt" because there is nothing special about this phrase that requires a special past tense
I added some rules just so things stay in hand. Sorry if it seems much but I don't want to be the cause of an upset on this site.
Another topic:
What's the past tense of "yeet"?
YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEETED
Another topic:
What's the past tense of "yeet"?
Thank goodness for people like you, I was afraid this was going to turn into a Reddit thread.
Also, it's YAINT.
No it's "yeeted" because there is nothing special about "yeet" that should require a special plural form
It’s YOTE becuase I SAY SO
A past participle is the form of a verb, typically ending in -ed in English, that is used in forming perfect and passive tenses and sometimes as an adjective, therefore the past participle of Yeet is Yeeted. However, the past tense is Yote. Take the word smite, the past tense is smote, but the past participle is smited.
Thank you for the lecture, O Great Wordologist
As Snowy said…
A past participle is the form of a verb, typically ending in -ed in English, that is used in forming perfect and passive tenses and sometimes as an adjective, therefore the past participle of Yeet is Yeeted. However, the past tense is Yote. Take the word smite, the past tense is smote, but the past participle is smited.
And Shiver…
(words with eet in the english dictionary change to ed to be past tense if the need to be, but usually they are only used in present tense)
And me…
"Yeet" can be an onomatopoeia, which is a word that expresses a sound, such as honk. The past tense of "honk" is honked. The past tense of "drip" is "dripped". The past tense of "meow" is "meowed". Look up the past tense of almost any onomatopoeia, and you'll find that the end of nearly every single one in past tense is "ed". "Yeet" is also a dance. The past tense of "dance" is danced. Therefore, the past tense of "yeet" is "yeeted".
And faceless…
it's "yeeted" because there is nothing special about "yeet" that should require a special plural form
Yeah…
New topics?
I have one, but I won't be participating because I had done it before
Would an alien invasion unite all humans on Earth?
no
No to finishing this topic or no to alien invasion uniting Earth?
the latter
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