No. It is a present participle.
The word 'growing' can be a participle or a gerund, depending on how it is used. If used as an adjective, it is a participle. Think of it as a verbal adjective. If used as a noun it is a gerund. Think of it as a verbal noun.
Participle: "This is a growing site, because it gets more and more questions."
Gerund: "Growing, for a site like this, requires getting more and more questions."
No, "growing" is not in future tense. In this context, "growing" is a present participle used to describe ongoing or continuous action in the present.
The future tense is 'will break'.
The future tense of the word "return" is "will return".
The future tense of the word "think" is "will think."
The future tense of the word "call" is "will call."
The future tense of the word "hang" is "will hang."
No, get is present tense. The future tense is will get.
The word 'will' is typically used as a modal auxiliary verb to indicate future tense. It can also express willingness or make promises.
The future tense of the word punished is 'will have punished'.
Both. Present tense: I/you/we/they get. Future tense: Will get.
The future tense is will write.
That is in future tense...
The future tense is 'will break'.
What is the future tense of the word hiked
"You will copyright" is the simple future tense. The future perfect tense is "You will have copyrighted". The future continuous tense is "You will be copyrighting".
The word "teach" can be present tense, past tense, or future tense depending on how it is used in a sentence. For example, "teach" is present tense in "I teach English," past tense in "I taught English last semester," and future tense in "I will teach English next year."
The future tense of the word spend is "will spend."
The future tense of the word "look" is "will look." For example, "I will look for my keys tomorrow."