I/he/she/it was planning. You/we/they were planning.
The past progressive tense of the word "plan" is "was planning".
I was printing.
get - present tense got - past tense is getting - present progressive had gotten - past perfect
Standing is not past tense. It is the present participle of the verb "stand". Present participles require the use of auxiliary verbs to show tense. Examples: was/were standing (past progressive) am/is/are standing (present progressive) will be standing (future progressive) Stood is the past tense of stand.
The past tense of the verb "hear" is "heard". If you mean the word as in, "My hearing is quite good," the word is a gerund in that case, and has no past tense. The compound auxiliary verb progressive "be hearing" has the past tense "was hearing", perfective "have heard" has the past tense "had heard", and progressive-perfective "have been hearing" has the past tense "had been hearing".
Would isn't used with the future progressive tense.Will, however, is used and would is the past tense of will.
The past perfect progressive tense is formed with the auxiliary verbs had + been and a present participle. The past perfect progressive tense of dance is had been dancing.
The term "was sitting" is a verb in the past progressive tense.
Depending on how you use the words some are already in the past tense. Got is the past tense of get. Present: I will get a dog. Past: I got a dog. With is a general term. It doesn't change in the past tense. Had is the past tense of has and had. Depending on which style of past you are using [progressive, perfect, progressive perfect, simple] will dictate how you use the word.
Well, if Ben is a person, and he is deceased, then I would say he is past tense. However, if you are talking about language, you might be referring to the word "been," which actually could be past, present, or future perfect progressive tense along with had or have. Examples: I have been reading (present perfect progressive). She had been reading (past perfect progressive). By that time, we will have been reading for a week (future perfect progressive).
The present progressive tense of the word "bury" is "burying."
The present progressive tense of the word "ask" is "asking."