Let’s go through each question one by one. We’re choosing the correct verb form for simple present tense — either affirmative (positive) or negative.
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Affirmative Sentences (1–10):
We use the base verb for I, you, we, they.
We add
-s or
-es for he, she, it, or singular nouns.
1. Ali and Abu → plural →
like
2. She → third person singular →
loves
3. Michael and Marcus → plural →
play
4. We → plural →
eat
5. I → first person →
have
6. Mr. Fernandez → third person singular →
drives
7. It → third person singular →
has
8. Alicia → third person singular →
gets
9. Ah Hong → third person singular →
cuts
10. Madam Mae → third person singular →
sells
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Negative Sentences (11–20):
For negatives in simple present:
- Use
don’t with I, you, we, they
- Use
doesn’t with he, she, it, or singular nouns
11. He →
doesn’t
12. They →
don’t
13. You →
don’t
14. Devi → third person singular →
doesn’t
15. Ricardo → third person singular →
doesn’t
16. Mrs. Valerie → third person singular →
doesn’t
17. We →
don’t
18. They →
don’t
19. Ana → third person singular →
doesn’t
20. My dog → third person singular →
doesn’t
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Final Answer:
1. like
2. loves
3. play
4. eat
5. have
6. drives
7. has
8. gets
9. cuts
10. sells
11. doesn't
12. don't
13. don't
14. doesn't
15. doesn't
16. doesn't
17. don't
18. don't
19. doesn't
20. doesn't
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of simple worksheet for.