No.
Bath is a noun. The proper verb form is bathe, which is the present tense. Bathed is the past tense, and will bathe is the future tense.
Admission is a noun and does not have a future tense. The verb form is admit, and the future tense is will admit.
Government is a noun and does not have a future tense. Only verbs have tense. Govern is a verb, and the future tense is will govern.
"Civilization" is a noun and so doesn't have a future tense.
Considering misconception is a noun, the past tense, present tense, and future tense of a noun is always the same.
No, it is not a noun. It is a future tense of the verb to serve.
It is a noun
Flight doesn't have a future tense as it's a noun. Only verbs have tenses.
Tanzania is a proper noun, not a verb tense.
Tomato is a noun and a name, as such it has no past or future tense.
The word "future" is a noun. Nouns don't have a past tense. Verbs are the only parts of speech to have a past tense.
The word 'wart' is a noun and so doesn't have a future tense. Only verbs have tenses.