Tenses refer to the form of a verb that indicates the time in which an action took place. In English, there are three primary tenses: past, present, and future. Each tense can be further divided into simple, continuous, perfect, and perfect continuous forms.
The three perfect tenses of a verb are the present perfect (have/has + past participle), the past perfect (had + past participle), and the future perfect (will have + past participle).
Past perfect is formed with - had + past participle.The past participle of shout is shoutedTherefore the past perfect verb is -- had shouted
Simple past perfect is 'I have tried'. Past perfect continuous is 'I have been trying'. Past perfect subjunctive is 'I had tried'
The past perfect of "think" is "had thought."
Had turned is the past perfect construction. Use had + past participle to create the past perfect tense.
The verb "kick" has the following tenses: Present: kick/kicks Past: kicked Present participle: kicking Past participle: kicked
The future tenses of the word "kick" are: Simple future: will kick Future continuous: will be kicking Future perfect: will have kicked Future perfect continuous: will have been kicking
You can't form past perfect tense with went. Went is the past of go.The past perfect is formed with -- had + past participle.The past participle of go is gone, past perfect = had gone
The past perfect tense of "ask" is "had asked."
The past perfect tense of open is 'had opened'.
There is no past perfect tense of sat. Sat is the past tense and past participle of sit.There is a past perfect of sit.Past perfect is formed with had + past participle. The past participle of sit is sat. So the past perfect of sit is: -- had sat.eg We had sat in the car all day.