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Iclearwater Posted 8 years ago
Vocabulary

Participles lacking

may [1] (may) auxiliary v. pres. <may;> past <might;> imperative, infinitive, and participles lacking

Hello,

participles lacking = don't use particples after "may", for example, going, and gone are both wrong?

Thanks!

  

Top answer

It is saying that the verb "may" does not have an imperative, an infinitive or participles. g. there is no "to may" or "maying" or "mayed".

  • It is saying that the verb "may" does not have an imperative, an infinitive or participles.
  • g.
  • there is no "to may" or "maying" or "mayed".
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1 Answers
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It is saying that the verb "may" does not have an imperative, an infinitive or participles. E.g. there is no "to may" or "maying" or "mayed".

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