The past tense of many verbs is formed by adding ed.
Examples:
remember + ed = remembered
climb + ed = climbed
If a verb ends in e, drop e before adding ed.
Examples:
phone - phoned
arrive - arrived
If a verb ends in y, change the y to ibefore adding ed.
Examples:
carry - carried
try - tried
If a verb ends in a short vowel followed by a single consonant, double the final consonant.
Examples:
trip- tripped
pop - popped
PRESENT TENSEThe present tense verb tells what is happening right now. To form present-tense verbs, use the plain verbs or use isor are before the verb and adding ing to the verb.
Examples:
We eat. We are eating.
He servers. He is serving.
Note: However 'ing' is also used for present, past, and future progressive tense.
Present Progressive: using am/is/are with verb form ending in -ing. Example: is examining
Past Progressive: using was/were with the verb form ending in -ing. Example: was examining
Future Progressive: using will be or shall be with the verb form ending in -ing. Example: will be examining or shall be examined
FUTURE TENSEThe future tense verb tells about things that will happen in the future. To form the future-tense verb, use will/shallbefore the verb.
Examples:
We will be eating.
Tomorrow we will walk to school.
When you use will, you may also have to add a helping verb and the ending ing.
Tomorrow we will be walking to school.
Some examples: Past tense - worked. Future tense - will work. Past tense - played. Future tense - will play. Past tense - lied. Future tense - will lie.
1.the present(or infinitive)2.the past tense3.the past participle4.the present participle
Tenses of compound verbs include continuous, perfect, and future tense verbs. Compound verbs can also be passive, for example the verb in "a hamburger was eaten by John" is passive.
Inappropriate changes would be called "problems with tense." Appropriate use of tense in a literary work involves maintaining the tense throughout the work. If you are writing in the present...verbs are in present tense; if writing in past tense, verbs will be in past tense, etc for future tense.
The sentence as a whole is in the future tense. The verbs are 'shall' (defective) and 'go', which in this case is used in the infinitive.
Some examples: Past tense - worked. Future tense - will work. Past tense - played. Future tense - will play. Past tense - lied. Future tense - will lie.
You is a pronoun and would not have a tense. The verbs used with it would reflect the tense. Examples: future: you will present: you are past: you did
The future tense verb for the sentence "I am ready to learn about verbs" would be "I will learn about verbs."
The future tense is: I will be ready to learn about verbs.
Verbs that describe the tense of the action are called "auxiliary verbs" or "helping verbs." These verbs are used in conjunction with the main verb to indicate the timing of the action, such as past, present, or future. Examples of auxiliary verbs include "is," "have," and "will."
Here are examples of regular verbs in their different tenses: Present Tense: I walk She plays We eat Past Tense: I walked She played We ate Future Tense: I will walk She will play We will eat
The future tense of the sentence "Are you ready to learn about verbs?" would be "Will you be ready to learn about verbs?"
'Driving' can be used in any tense: I was driving, I am driving, I will be driving.====Also, remember, 'Driving' is not a verb. It is a gerund. 'Drive' and 'drove' are present and past tense verbs. In the above examples, 'was,' 'am' and '(will) be' are the verbs.
tense is for verbs ,, idiot
Government is a noun and does not have a future tense. Only verbs have tense. Govern is a verb, and the future tense is will govern.
Past tense verbs indicate actions that have already happened, while future tense verbs indicate actions that will happen. Verbs in the past tense often end in -ed or changed form to show the past action. Verbs in the future tense often use auxiliary words like "will" or "shall" to indicate the action will occur later.
The word "you" is a pronoun and so doesn't have a future tense. Only verbs have tenses.