went, said, cried, exclaimed, etc.
anything with ed on the end
Only verbs have tenses, so any word that is not a verb does not have a past tense (or any other tense).
Depending on how you use the words some are already in the past tense. Got is the past tense of get. Present: I will get a dog. Past: I got a dog. With is a general term. It doesn't change in the past tense. Had is the past tense of has and had. Depending on which style of past you are using [progressive, perfect, progressive perfect, simple] will dictate how you use the word.
Some examples include: danced, drew, drank, died, disagreed.
Id'd.
Some examples of words that do not change in spelling when they become past tense are: hit, put, cut, split, and let.
Some examples of words with past tense forms ending in 't' include "felt," "kept," "spent," and "slept."
"Some" is not a verb- the concept of tense does not apply. The past tense of sum is summed, if that is what you meant.
The past tense is 'some books were on sale'.
put words at the end of a word like ed, which makes past tense words like killed, filled, shared. but in some cases there are words like ran, went, drank, sang, and said.
The past tense of "need" is "needed," and the past continuous tense is "was needing" or "were needing." For example, "I needed some help yesterday" (past tense) and "I was needing assistance when you arrived" (past continuous tense).
Some examples of words that change their spelling entirely when in the past tense are "go" (went), "eat" (ate), and "see" (saw). These words undergo irregular changes in their form when expressing actions in the past.
Usually, past tense ending will be "ed" added onto the word. Some examples are how the verbs "jump" and "laugh" turn to the past tense forms of "jumped" and "laughed". However, many exception to the rule allow for words like "swim" to turn to the past tense form "swam" or "sing" to the past tense forms of "sang" or "sung".