What is the present tense of “aquaplane”!

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Remember this!

The present tense form of 'aquaplane' is aquaplane or aquaplanes. Example: Be careful, as your car aquaplanes easily in heavy rain. (Be careful, as your car aquaplanes easily in heavy rain.)

Definition of “aquaplane”

  • to lose control of a vehicle on a wet road surface and slide without gripping the road
  • to slide or skid on a wet surface

Tense sentence structure and examples:

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Notes from a Native English Speaker

Here are the general structures of a present and past participle. Remember, some verbs have an irregular form and may not follow this structure: Present Participle: [Verb] -ing Past Participle: [Verb] -ed

Present Simpleaquaplane
Present Continuousaquaplaning
Present Perfecthave aquaplaned
Present Simple
The simple present tense is used to describe habitual, regular, or general facts.
Subject + Verb + (Object)

Example

Cars aquaplane easily on wet roads.

Example

I always slow down when it starts to aquaplane.

Present Continuous
The present continuous tense is used to describe actions happening at the moment of speaking or future plans.
Subject + am/is/are + Present Participle + (Object)

Example

The vehicle is aquaplaning due to the heavy rain.

Example

We are aquaplaning on this slippery surface.

Present Perfect
The present perfect tense is used to indicate actions completed at some point in the past but relevant to the present.
Subject + have/has + Past Participle + (Object)

Example

She has aquaplaned several times in her driving career.

Example

They have aquaplaned on this road many times before.

aquaplane Subject-Verb Agreement

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Notes from a Native English Speaker

Subject-verb agreement means that a subject and its verb match. They’re either both plural or both singular. A singular subject takes a singular verb. - Example: The cat is sleeping. A plural subject takes a plural verb. - Example: The cats are sleeping.

In the present tense, 'aquaplane' follows the typical rule of adding 's' when the subject is third person singular (he, she, it), but it remains the same for all other subjects (first person, second person, and plural subjects).
Singular First Person (I)aquaplane
Singular Second Person (You)aquaplane
Singular Third Person (He/She/It)aquaplanes
Plural (We/You/They)aquaplane

Example

I aquaplane on wet roads.

Example

You aquaplane easily in these conditions.

Example

He aquaplanes whenever it rains.

Example

She aquaplanes on slippery surfaces.

Example

It aquaplanes in heavy downpours.

Example

We aquaplane during rainy weather.

Example

You aquaplane if you don't slow down.

Example

They aquaplane on wet highways.

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