Yes. For example, you can say:
I ran yesterday, and I will run tomorrow.
or
This year we went to the mountains for the holidays but this year we are going to go to the beach
past (went) future (are going to go)
Yes, a sentence can contain both past tense and future tense verbs. For example, "She will have finished the project by the deadline." In this sentence, "will have finished" is future tense and "by the deadline" indicates a future event from the perspective of the past tense "finished."
The future perfect tense uses the past participle of a verb.
In the context of grammar, "tense" refers to the form of a verb that indicates the time of an action or state. It shows whether the action is happening in the past, present, or future.
This sentence is present tense. The verb - chase - is present.Chasedis past. To make this sentence past change the verb to the past form:Some people chasedtornadoes.
The term "planned" is the past tense of the verb "plan." It indicates that an action was intended or arranged at a specific time in the past. It refers to an action that was planned and completed before the current time.
There is no future tense verb in this sentence. The sentence is present simple (is).
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.
The past tense of speak is spoke, and the future tense is will speak.
The verb 'will' is the future tense.
If a verb happens in the past, present, or future
Without seeing the sentence in question, it is not possible to determine the verb tense. However, common verb tenses in English include present, past, and future. The tense can usually be identified by the form of the verb.
The verb laughed is past. The sentence is past simple.