When paired with the indefinite article a, recount is a noun. Example: I demand a recount.Recount, as a verb, is not past tense. It is present tense. The past tense is recounted.
It should be written in present tense.
Describing how to do a process is usually in the present tense.
It doesn't have a past/present/future tense as it is not a verb.
The present tense of the verb 'was' is is.
When paired with the indefinite article a, recount is a noun. Example: I demand a recount.Recount, as a verb, is not past tense. It is present tense. The past tense is recounted.
The present tense of written is:I/You/We/They write.He/She/It writes.
The past perfect tense is 'I had written'.The present perfect tense is 'I/you/we/they have written. He/she/it has written.
It is present tense.
You can do either. Past tense is more popular, although some well known books such as the Hunger Games and Monsters of Men have used present tense. When present tense is used though, the books are usually written in first person aswell.
Write is the present tense. The past tense is wrote, and the past participle is written.
To change a verb from present tense to past tense, usually you add "-ed" to the end of the verb. For example, "to have" in present tense becomes "had" in past tense.
It should be written in present tense.
Present Tense: I am alive. Past Tense: I was alive. Future Tense: I will be alive. "alive" is not a verb, it is an adjective, so the past/present/future tense is for the verb usually associated it.
'Have been written' is in the present perfect tense. It is formed by combining the present tense of 'have' with the past participle 'been' and the past participle of the main verb 'written'. This tense is often used to indicate actions that started in the past and are still relevant in the present.
Describing how to do a process is usually in the present tense.
Have/Has written.