Is it plead or pleaded?

The correct past tense of plead and past participle of โ€œpleadโ€ in standard American English is โ€œpleadedโ€ or โ€œpledโ€ (e.g., He pleaded/pled guilty to the charges in court on Monday,โ€ โ€œHe has pleaded/pled guiltyโ€).

However, plead ( ) is a rarely used alternative spelling of โ€œpled.โ€ It is best to avoid this spelling in formal contexts.

QuillBotโ€™s free Grammar Checker will help you to avoid mistakes with irregular verbs like โ€œplead.โ€

Read this FAQ: Is it plead or pleaded?

What does fed up mean?

The adjective fed up means very dissatisfied or annoyed, particularly with a situation that has lasted for a long time (e.g., โ€œIโ€™m fed up because this is the third time that the heat has stopped working this winter, and the landlord wonโ€™t do anything about it.โ€)

QuillBotโ€™s free Paraphraser will help you to find alternatives to the adjective โ€œfed upโ€ in your writing.

Read this FAQ: What does fed up mean?

What is the past participle of feed?

The past participle of feed is โ€œfedโ€ ( e.g., โ€œHave you fed the fish yet?,โ€ โ€œThe fish were fed yesterdayโ€).

โ€œFedโ€ is also the simple past tense of feed (e.g., โ€œWho fed the fish yesterday?โ€).

Have you tried QuillBotโ€™s free Grammar Checker? It will help you to avoid errors with irregular verbs like โ€œfeed.โ€

Read this FAQ: What is the past participle of feed?

Is it fead or fed?

The correct spelling of the simple past tense of feed is fed ( ), not fead (e.g., โ€œI canโ€™t remember if I fed the dog this morningโ€).

โ€œFedโ€ is also the past participle of the verb โ€œfeedโ€ (e.g., โ€œIโ€™m sure youโ€™ve already fed the dog twice todayโ€).

QuillBotโ€™s free Grammar Checker will pick up typos like โ€œfeadโ€ instead of โ€œfed.โ€

Read this FAQ: Is it fead or fed?

Is it feed or fed?

It can be feed or fed.

Feed ( ) is the infinitive of the verb (e.g., โ€œDo you want me to feed the chickens?โ€).

Feed is also a simple present tense form of the verb (e.g. โ€œI/you/we/they feed the chickens every dayโ€).

Fed ( ) is the simple past tense of feed and the past participle of โ€œfeedโ€ (e.g., โ€œI fed the chickens yesterday,โ€ โ€œHave you fed the chickens yet?โ€).

QuillBotโ€™s free Grammar Checker will help you to avoid mistakes with tricky irregular verbs like โ€œfeed.โ€

Read this FAQ: Is it feed or fed?

What does tear up mean?

The phrasal verb tear up , when pronounced so โ€œtearโ€ rhymes with โ€œcare,โ€ has the following meanings:

  • โ€œPull or rip into smaller piecesโ€ (e.g., โ€œPlease tear the boxes up and put them in the recyclingโ€)
  • โ€œRemove or destroy completely,โ€ especially infrastructure or land (e.g., โ€œThey use bulldozers to tear up the forestโ€)
  • โ€œPerform something extremely wellโ€ (e.g., โ€œYou guys really tore it up on stage today!)โ€”this is an informal usage

The past tense of tear in this phrasal verb is โ€œtore,โ€ the past participle is โ€œtorn.

The phrasal verb tear up , when pronounced so โ€œtearโ€ rhymes with โ€œhere,โ€ means โ€œbegin to form tears in your eyesโ€ (e.g., โ€œHe noticed that she was tearing up and offered her a tissueโ€). The past participle and past tense form of this phrasal verb is โ€œteared up.โ€

Read this FAQ: What does tear up mean?