No, a hypothesis is written in future tense. It should be written also in an "if...then..." format, i.e. If the soda is combined with carbon dioxide, then the soda will foam.
No, a hypothesis is typically written in present tense to clearly state the expected relationship between variables and to guide the research process.
There is no past tense, it's a noun. So it is hypothesis. The plural form is hypothesi. 2nd Answer: . . . the commonly used plural, though, is hypotheses.
Worried is past tense. The present tense is worry.
The past tense of "conducted" is "conducted."
The past tense of "influence" is "influenced."
The past tense of "behave" is "behaved."
There is no past tense, it's a noun. So it is hypothesis. The plural form is hypothesi. 2nd Answer: . . . the commonly used plural, though, is hypotheses.
Written is the past participle of write. The simple past tense is wrote.
The past perfect tense is 'I had written'.The present perfect tense is 'I/you/we/they have written. He/she/it has written.
Yes. Actually, had written . Wrote is also the past tense
Yes. Actually, had written . Wrote is also the past tense
Write is the present tense. The past tense is wrote, and the past participle is written.
The past tense of write is wrote.The past participle of write is written.
'Wrote' is the past tense and 'written' is the past participle.
It is past tense.
Wrote is the past tense of write, and written is the past participle.
"Had written" is the past perfect tense.
The past tense of writ ed is written.