Strictly speaking the tense of a verb indicates time, when an action or state of being took place.
It will show whether the action is finished or continuing, in the past, at the present or in the future.
well, if its past tense, then it already happened, indicating the past. past is time.
ANWSER;A. Time
Yes. 'was' is a past tense of 'is', and 'is' is a verb and so 'was' must be a verb.
Yes, was is a verb ; the simple past tense of is.
Yes, it is a verb. It is the past tense of "to have" and used as an auxiliary verb in the past perfect tense.
A helper verb is also called an auxiliary verb. It determines the mood or tense of another verb in a verb tense.
No, it is a verb. Specifically, it is the past tense of the verb "to go."
Past verb tense: We drank.Present verb tense: We are drinking.Future verb tense: We will drink.
The past tense of the verb 'am' is 'was' or 'were.' The verb 'am' is derived from the verb 'to be.'
The past-tense verb for "be" is "was" or "were" depending on the subject.
The past tense of "do" is "did."
This is the imperfect tense. (verb)= present tense (verb)ed= perfect tense was (verb)ing= imperfect tense Perfect and imperfect are both forms of the past tense.
"Our" is not a verb, so it has no tense.
Can is the present tense.
The present tense of the verb 'was' is is.
This is past tense. Although the verb give is in the present form the tense is shown by the auxiliary verb do, which is in the past - did.
The tense of the verb "lost" is past tense.
"goes" is the present tense of the verb "go."
The verb "washes" is in present tense.