You can say "J'espère que tout s'est bien passé."
The present tense is "come". The past participle is "come", as well. "Came" is the past tense.
The past tense of sing is sang: I sang.I have sung is the present perfect tense. You would not say, "I sung the song well." Rather, you would say, "I sang the song well".sang
The past tense of "abide" is "abided," and the past participle is "abided" as well.
Yes, the past tense of "put" is "put" as well. For example, "I put the book on the shelf yesterday."
It is "washed". In addition, the word "washed" is the past participle of "wash" as well.
Well the past tense of ' is ' is 'was' . The past tense of fall is fell the past tense of sit is sat and change is changed I hope I was right 😇❤️
If the sentence contains the conjugated form of "avoir" as well as the past participle. Present tense: Je chante! Past tense: J'ai chanté!
Well if you want to say he or she was with then you are going to use the past tense french. So, for he was with her translates to: il a ete avec elle and she was with him is: elle a ete avec il. Hope this helps.
The past tense is : I was sure you were driving well.
"Filled" is the past tense as well as the past participle.
Well..... Garbled is already the past tense. So There really is not past tense for garbled.
The present tense is "come". The past participle is "come", as well. "Came" is the past tense.
I'm not sure if it is past tense. Definitely, it is present tense, and can be used in future tense, as well.
Quit doesn't change in the past tense or for the past participle. Present and past tense are quit; the past participle is quit, as well.
Well of course the pluralised past tense would be "tricks"
Well the past tense of word dance would be "word danced".
The past tense of sing is sang: I sang.I have sung is the present perfect tense. You would not say, "I sung the song well." Rather, you would say, "I sang the song well".sang