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Greatest is an adjective with no past tense.
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In English, only verbs have primitives, past tenses, past participles, and present participles. Greatest can be used as an adjective, adverb and noun, not a verb, so there is no past tense and past participle.
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Greatest is an adjective that has no past tense and has a level of variation.
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Because you can express your current views on the past [I hope it helps you, if you have any questions, you can ask I wish you to learn and progress and go to the next level!] (*
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Greet, right?
greeted English [ɡ'ri:t d] 美 [ɡ'ri:tɪd]
v.Greet; Compliments; welcome( past tense and past participle of greet );
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There is a difference:
Greatest means very good, great. The part of speech is an adjective.
Greet means greeting. The part of speech is a verb.
Usage of greatest:
this hamburger tastes great.This hamburger is so delicious. (greatest to describe burger).
Usage of greet:
the doctor greeted the patient warmly.The doctor greeted the patient in a friendly manner.
The doctor greets the patient, hoping to help.
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The differences are:
Greatest English [gre t] American [ɡret].
adj.Great, outstanding; Excellent, remarkable; A lot; Momentous;
adv.[Colloquial] very good; satisfactorily, successfully, smoothly; proudly;
n.The big guys; great people; important people, masters; Famous;
Example sentence] the room had a great bay window
This room has a huge bay window.
cool English [ku:l] beautiful [kul].
adj.Cool; Dispassionate; Top-notch; arrogant and indifferent;
vt.(make) cool; (make) cool, cool; Cooling, cooling; Quell;
n.Cool, cool place; Cool, cool air;
Example sentence]i felt a current of cool air
I felt a cool breeze.
Very English [ veri ] American [ v ri].
adj.Very, very; Exactly, exactly; Full; Typical;
adv.Very, very; sufficient, complete;
Example sentence]she's not very impressed with them.
She wasn't impressed with them.
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