These are not all the tenses only main ones"
We use present simple to talk about:
Habits, things we do everyday eg I get up early
Things that are always true e.g. The sun rises in the east, I like ice cream
Things that are true now e.g I live in Whangarei
We use present continuous to talk about:
Activities happening now e.g. He is watchingT.V
Things happening around now e.g. I am reading a good book
For future events e.g. We are having a party on Saturday
We use past simple to talk about:
Completed actions in the past e.g. I went to the cinema
To tell a story e.g. There was a man who lived in a small house.
We use past continuous to talk about:
An activity that happened
some time in the past e.g. I was watching TV
Descriptions e.g. The sun was shining the birds were singing.
We use going to to talk about:
A future plan. e.g. They're going to get married in July
Will
We use will to talk about the future
when we don't have a plan but make a
decision at the time of talking. e.g I will get the phone ! / I'll get the phone !
Past tense of a verb is used in a sentence whenever action that has taken place in the past is to be mentioned.
e.g., Teacher taught English grammar to the students. (taught is the past tense of the verb teach).
Verbs have different tenses.
The word 'chronological' is an adjective. Only verbs have tenses.
Different is an adjective.
Seen is the past participle of the verb see, which is used to create the perfect tenses. I have seen the light. (present perfect) When it precedes a noun it can turn into an adjective, too.
noun
what part of speech is refreshing, relaxing, and rejuvenating.
"Gotten" is the past participle of the verb "to get" and is therefore used in forming perfect tenses of this verb.
It is okay to shift tenses in a sentence when discussing different time frames or when reporting indirect speech or thoughts. Just make sure the tenses align logically and coherently within the context of the sentence to avoid confusion for the reader.
"Who'd" is a contraction of "who had" or "who would," with "had" or "would" being the helping verbs. Therefore, "who'd" is a contraction commonly used in informal English to represent different verb tenses.
"Has" is a verb and is classified as a helping verb or auxiliary verb. It is used to show possession, as in "She has a cat," or to form the perfect tenses, as in "He has eaten."
"Bad" doesn't have any tenses as it's not a verb.
The word 'chronological' is an adjective. Only verbs have tenses.
The word "Islam" is a noun and so doesn't have any tenses. Only verbs have tenses.
Different is an adjective.
Word forms are different variations of a word, such as its singular and plural forms, verb tenses, or different parts of speech (e.g., noun, verb, adjective). They allow for more flexibility and expressiveness in language.
"You read" is two different parts of speech. You - pronoun read - verb
It and is are two different parts of speech. "It" is a pronoun; "is" is a verb. "It's" is a contraction of it is.
The different tenses for the word "be" are: Present tense: am, is, are Past tense: was, were Future tense: will be