Yes, both forms are cast.
The past tense of the verb "be" in 2nd person plural is "were." The present tense of the same is "are."
The past tense of "where" is "where." It remains the same in both present and past tense.
The present tense of "shut" is "shut." It remains the same in both past and present tense.
The English language has many confusing present and past tenses. Surprisingly, "will" does not have a present tense. Its present tense is will only.Will is present tense the negative is won't and the past tense of will is would.
The past tense of lie (to speak an untruth) is lied.The past tense of lie (to rest in a horizontal position) is lay.Lay is also a present tense verb, and its past tense form is laid.
The present tense of "hit" is "hits." For example, "She hits the ball."
It is "cost" (same form as present tense).
The past tense of lie (to speak an untruth) is lied.The past tense of lie (to rest in a horizontal position) is lay.Lay is also a present tense verb, and its past tense form is laid.
The past tense is "came" and the past participle is "come", which in this irregular verb has the same form as the present tense.
Considering misconception is a noun, the past tense, present tense, and future tense of a noun is always the same.
Blew is past tense, and blow is present tense.
The pronunciation is the same.
beatbetbesetbroadcastburstcastcostcutfithithurtknitletputquitridshedshutslitspreadthrusttelecastburst
Present tense - I bet. Past tense - I bet. Future tense - I will bet.
The past participle is the verb that's used in the present perfect tense.
The form of the verb provides this information, although sometimes it needs to be clarified. There are some verbs (such as read) that use the same spelling for the present tense and the past tense. Example: He runs is the present tense. (He is running) He ran is the past tense. (He was running) He will run is the future tense. (He will be running)
Stay in one tense. Past, present, or future. A sentence shouldn't contain a past tense verb and a present tense verb. You can, however, mix present simple, present progressive, and present perfect. The same can be said for past and future tenses. There are times when the mixing of past, present, and future is acceptable.