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.
The past tense of know is knew, and the future tense is will know.
"Know" is present tense. The past tense of "know" is "knew."
First of all know what is participles . The third form of the verb is called a participles. So in the mode of tenses it will be changed . With present tense it is present participle and with future tense it will be future participle.
'Would' implies a sort-of hypothetical; something like an 'if; then' statement. For example, "If I didn't have any money, what would I do?" So 'would it be' can work as future tense or as present tense, as long as there is something like a hypothetical in the statement being made. For example, "Would it be fine with you if I went to the shops tomorrow?" is a sort-of hypothetical future tense statement, while "Would it be fine with you if I was jumping now?" is a sort-of hypothetical present tense statement. It can work as future tense, but not quite as most future tense things do, so I'd need to know the sentence it's in to answer for sure.
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.
The verbs will be in their present tense form. The sentence will be referring to something that is presently happening.
I know he is there.
The past tense of know is knew, and the future tense is will know.
First of all know what is participles . The third form of the verb is called a participles. So in the mode of tenses it will be changed . With present tense it is present participle and with future tense it will be future participle.
"Know" is present tense. The past tense of "know" is "knew."
'Would' implies a sort-of hypothetical; something like an 'if; then' statement. For example, "If I didn't have any money, what would I do?" So 'would it be' can work as future tense or as present tense, as long as there is something like a hypothetical in the statement being made. For example, "Would it be fine with you if I went to the shops tomorrow?" is a sort-of hypothetical future tense statement, while "Would it be fine with you if I was jumping now?" is a sort-of hypothetical present tense statement. It can work as future tense, but not quite as most future tense things do, so I'd need to know the sentence it's in to answer for sure.
i HAVE a cookie I HAVE $100 he HAS a cookie she HAS $100 You use "have" with most pronouns and plural nouns. "I, you, we, etc." You use "has" with third person singular. "He, she, it"
The grammatical tense that is being used.
The future tense of "knew" is "will know".
"Where do you live?" is present tense. The person asking the question wants to know where someone lives now. If the person asking the question wanted to know where someone used to live, some time in the past, the sentence would be, "Where did you live?" If the person asking the question wanted to know where someone was going to live, some time in the future, the sentence would be, "Where will you live?"
The future perfect tense of "know" is "will have known."