infinitive: run
past: ran
past participle: run
"You have run" is correct.
Will be run
Is run is correct.
ran is the past tense of run, so i would say 'i'm going to run to the store', or 'i ran to the store and bought fruit'. ' this sink is running', or ' the sink ran all day'.
ran
The past tense is 'ran'. The past participle is 'run', so the past perfect (pluperfect) tense is 'had run'. 'I ran three miles yesterday.' 'I had run twenty miles over the previous week.' 'I ran that training course last year.' 'The course had been run many times before.' (this is passive past perfect). Jack had run the course many times. (active past perfect) NEVER 'have ran' or 'had ran'. Those constructions do not exist in English.
The word is spelled run, just as you spelled it. I ran. You ran. He/she/it ran. I run. You run.
"Will be run": the verb "run" is its own past participle.
The past tense of ran is ran. The future is run. The present is running. Had Run, had ran.
Neither is correct.I should be I ran but I have run.
ran is past and run is present
That depends. "Ran out" is past tense, and "run out" is present tense. Yesterday, I ran out of sugar. I hope I don't run out of sugar.
Ran is past tense, run is present.
yes, ran is past tense of run and run as well as ran is an action verb.
Had run is correct.
Will be run
infinitive: run past: ran past participle: run
The word ran is the past tense of the verb 'to run', which can be used with a singular or plural subject. Examples: I ran... You ran... They ran... Everyone ran...