Check for a personnel form?

Ka
9

If I have a sentence in which I must determine the verbs… How should I ask for the personnel form? Change the genus of the sentence, change the time, change the plural & singular or change the tense of the sentence?

How can I be sure that it is a personal form?

In for example:

The motivated computer engineer repairs many damaged laptops every day in his company.

The words in bold are in my opinion personal forms because if I change the sentence: "The motivated computer technicians repair a damaged computer in their daily operations."

Is it correct that way? Or which of them are not verbs (How can I check that? ")

Sp

Only "repaired" is a verb because it answers the question: what does the computer engineer do?

The other two are participles and answer like adjectives to the question: "How is the computer engineer? How are the laptops?

Participles are derived from the verb. You take the trunk and usually hang on a t: motivated, drawn, styled, procured, brought, dreamed, filled.

For irregular, strong verbs, one hangs on: gone, helped, sung.

Ka

Ok, but they change too?

Sp

Yes, but not only verbs, but also adjectives, participles, and nouns change. Verbs are conjugated, so put into the 6 personnel forms.

I talk, you talk, he talks, etc.

The others are declined, ie placed in a specific case (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative in singular and plural).

the man, the man, the man, the man, etc.

the big man, the big man, the big man, the big man use.

the repaired table, the repaired table, the repaired table, the repaired table, etc.

Ka

And how can I simply check that it is a personal form or not?

Ka

So if I change the time of the sentence, only the personnel form changes, right?

Sp

You take the word and try it: I'll do it, you'll do it, he'll do it - go!
Teit change: I do-t-em you do-t-est, he do-t-e: go, so verb!

I big-e, you big-est, he big-t: do not go, no verb!

i dream-e, you dream-st, he dream-t: do not go, no verb!

Sp

Yes.

Ka

How about the example:

"… That had long been announced by the tutor, …"

If I change the time it means

"… Announcing, …"

and the last verb falls away, or it is called

"… Has been announced, …"

and only the last verb changes. In this case, are both personal forms, or only the last?

Sp

Thanks for the star.