It's either a short Infinitive (without TO, that is), or the Simple Present Tense.
The verb "leave" can be in various tenses such as present tense ("leave"), past tense ("left"), and future tense ("will leave").
It is the future perfect.
Identify is a verb. The past tense and past participle are identified.
Past Tense (Simple)
The present tense form of the verb "leave" is "leaves" for third person singular (he/she/it) and "leave" for all other pronouns (I, you, we, they).
Yes, "recognized" is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb "recognize," which means to identify someone or something based on previous knowledge or experience.
It is the future perfect.
Identify is a verb. The past tense and past participle are identified.
Identified is a verb. It's the past tense of identify.
The past tense is identified.
Future tense.
Past Tense (Simple)
There is no verb spelled leace. If you meant lease, the future tense is will lease. If you meant leave, the future tense is will leave.
I felt very tense and stressed out. A tense muscle can ache. The teacher asked students to identify the verb tense used in the sentence.
The present tense form of the verb "leave" is "leaves" for third person singular (he/she/it) and "leave" for all other pronouns (I, you, we, they).
The verb tense is wrong. You have to say, he suggested leaving at ten o'clock. Since the verb leave is being used as the object of the verb suggest, you need the gerund tense. Which is to say, the verb is acting as a noun.
PRESENT PERFECT
The verb in the sentence is did strike; the word 'did' is the past tense of the auxiliary verb 'do' with the base form of the main verb 'strike'.