There are six main tenses in Latin: present, imperfect, future, perfect, pluperfect, and future perfect. Each tense expresses a different time relationship between the action of the verb and the time being referred to.
Things that will happen in the future.
There are three simple tenses - past, present and future.
Yes, they are the basic tenses.
No - basic verb tenses are present, past and future.
The verb tenses disagree when they do not align in time or when they do not convey a consistent timeline in a sentence. This typically occurs when there is inconsistency between past, present, or future tenses within a sentence or when the sequence of events is unclear.
The future tenses is "I will live"
The three tenses are: Past Present Future
Future continuous and future perfect continuous tenses.
future tenses are verbs that describe things that happen in the future
The three main verb tenses in English are present, past, and future. Present tense refers to actions happening now or regularly. Past tense refers to actions that have already happened. Future tense refers to actions that will happen at a later time.
"I am reading" and "I read" are present tenses. "I will read" or "I shall read" or "I am going to read" are future tenses.