Duty compels me to leave!
Her impassioned speech compels the audience to take action.
The present tense of "judge" is "judge."
The present tense of imprisoned is imprison.
Obey is present tense. I/We/You/They obey He/She/It obeys
The present tense of require is:I/You/We/They require.He/She/It requires.The present participle is requiring.
The present tense of "stole" is "steal."
"I am eating lunch."
The present tense of the sentence "She turns the light on" is "She turns the light on."
The tense for the sentence "I am speaking English" is present continuous tense.
The verb in the sentence is in present tense.
The metal spokes on my bike are about to brake.
That sentence is present tense. "Is" is a present tense linking verb.
This sentence is in the present tense.
The verbs will be in their present tense form. The sentence will be referring to something that is presently happening.
To determine the tense of a sentence, look at the verb in the sentence. If the verb is in the past form (e.g., "walked"), the sentence is in the past tense. If the verb is in the present form (e.g., "walks"), the sentence is in the present tense. If the verb is in the future form (e.g., "will walk"), the sentence is in the future tense.
To convert a present tense sentence to past tense, you generally change the verb to its past tense form. For regular verbs, this involves adding '-ed' to the base form of the verb. For irregular verbs, the past tense form must be memorized. It is also important to make any necessary adjustments to the sentence structure for tense consistency.
Present tense.
The shift in tense in this sentence is from future tense (will do) to present tense (watches).