To form the past tense, add "-ed" to regular verbs (e.g. walk -> walked) or use the irregular verb conjugation (e.g. go -> went). To form the future tense, use "will" or "going to" followed by the base form of the verb (e.g. I will go, I am going to go).
To say in the past tense, you would use the word "said."
'Is' is present tense be verb so no.But you can use the past participle after is in a passive sentence.The milk is kept in the fridge.
When you form the Negative and the Interrogative of a Past Tense verb, you use the auxiliary TO DO in the Past Tense = DID + the Short Infinitive of the respective verb (the Infinitive minus TO). The information that we are dealing with a Past Tense is included in the auxiliary verb, so we don't need to use the Past Tense of the main verb, too. Therefore, you should say "didn't see", not "didn't saw".
Past - there is nothing like that to use grammatically, but the natural replacement is 'Was'. Future - will be.
"You are" is not a verb. "Are" is a verb, but it's present tense, and it can't be used "with past tense" because it's not past tense, it's present tense.
To form the past tense, add "-ed" to regular verbs (e.g. walk -> walked) or use the irregular verb conjugation (e.g. go -> went). To form the future tense, use "will" or "going to" followed by the base form of the verb (e.g. I will go, I am going to go).
To say in the past tense, you would use the word "said."
'Is' is present tense be verb so no.But you can use the past participle after is in a passive sentence.The milk is kept in the fridge.
No, a thesaurus is used to find synonyms and antonyms of words, not to determine the past tense of a verb. To find the past tense of a verb, you can consult a verb conjugation chart or a grammar resource.
When you form the Negative and the Interrogative of a Past Tense verb, you use the auxiliary TO DO in the Past Tense = DID + the Short Infinitive of the respective verb (the Infinitive minus TO). The information that we are dealing with a Past Tense is included in the auxiliary verb, so we don't need to use the Past Tense of the main verb, too. Therefore, you should say "didn't see", not "didn't saw".
Past indefinite tense
Past - there is nothing like that to use grammatically, but the natural replacement is 'Was'. Future - will be.
When two or more subjects are joined by "and," you should use the plural form of the verb, regardless of whether the subjects are in the past or present tense. For example, "He and she are going to the store" (present tense) or "John and Mary were at the party last night" (past tense).
To form past tense for multiple verbs in a sentence, you should conjugate each verb separately. For regular verbs, add "-ed" to the base form of the verb. For irregular verbs, use the past tense form of each verb. Make sure each verb agrees in tense with the subject of the sentence.
The correct tense for the verb "sing" in this context is "sang." When referring to actions that happened in the past, such as when you were a child, you should use the past tense of the verb, which is "sang." So the correct sentence would be "When you were a kid, you sang nicely."
I believe it to be true, as you "could" use it as "could have", have being the past tense helping verb.