asked 214k views
2 votes
The pollen made me
O sneezed
.. sneez
O snoze
O snozed

asked
User Cleggy
by
8.3k points

2 Answers

2 votes

Answer: sneeze

Step-by-step explanation:

The past tense of the verb "made" has already indicated that the activity has taken place in the past. It is technically not an auxiliary verb, but it functions like one in this instance. Therefore, it is appropriate to leave "sneeze" in present tense.

answered
User Larssg
by
7.9k points
5 votes

Answer:

The pollen made me sneeze.

Snoze and snozed aren't words.

When you say something made you do something, you would say the verb in its present tense. (Ex: "He pushed me and made me fall." You would say fall instead of fell.)

answered
User James Barrett
by
7.8k points
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