"Has missed" is the present perfect tense (third person singular).
The word "miss" can be in the present tense, past tense, or future tense depending on the context of the sentence. For example, "I miss you" is present tense, "I missed you" is past tense, and "I will miss you" is future tense.
The present tense of "missed" is "miss." For example: "I miss you."
The present perfect tense of "missing" is "have/has missed."
To form questions in the perfect present tense, start with the auxiliary verb "have" followed by the subject, then "past participle" form of the main verb. For example, "Have you finished your homework?"
The past tense of "miss" is "missed."
missed is the simple past tense had missed is the past perfect tense
Had missed
Present tense is used to describe things that are happening now or are generally true. Past tense is used to describe things that have already happened.
The verb is is the present tense.
The past tense for "miss you" is "missed you."
Present perfect tense.
it's present tense actually