The fact that everyone but him understood the professor's lecture brought on the epiphany that instead of being a genius, he had simply been a big fish in a small pond in high school.
It would still be epiphany, except you would say "I hadan epiphany."
Use a past tense sentence subject and a present tense sentence predicate example: The movie was very amusing.
Sanged is not a word sang is past tense of singing.
To use the word bask you would need to write the sentence in the present tense. Example sentence: When I go to the beach I bask in the sun. (basked is in the past tense, will bask is in the future)
Froze is the past tense of freeze. An example sentence would be: She left her cup in the snow and it froze.
In past tense
in a past tense sentence.
in past tense
in a past tense sentence.
You have to you have in present tense. You had to use had to write that sentence- use had in past tense.
Use present tense when describing actions, events, or states that are currently happening or are generally true. Use past tense when discussing actions, events, or states that have already occurred or are no longer true in the present.
in a past tense sentence.
It depends on the sentence. Was is a past tense singular verb.
Use a past tense sentence subject and a present tense sentence predicate example: The movie was very amusing.
To use "eager" in the past tense, you would say "I was eager" or "he/she/they were eager." "Eager" remains the same in its base form in past tense, and you just need to add the appropriate form of the verb "to be" before it.
Past tense of "be" are: I was... You were... He/She/It was... We were... (or We're...) They were... Example: I was at the movies last night.
I remained at the party until midnight last night.
To use the word "akin" in the past tense in a sentence, you would change it to "akin to," which means similar to or like. For example: "The new technology was akin to the older model in many ways."