The present perfect tense is used to indicate an action that happened at an unspecified time before now. It is formed by using the auxiliary verb "have" or "has" followed by the past participle of the main verb. This tense is often used when there is a connection to the present moment or when the exact time of the action is not important.
The present perfect tense of "ask" is "have asked."
The present perfect tense of the word ask is "have asked."
The present perfect tense of "ask" is "have asked" or "has asked", depending on the subject (I, you, we, they - have asked; he, she, it - has asked).
The present perfect tense of "ask" in this context is "have asked". For example, "You have asked Madame Mathias if she will sponsor your French club".
The present perfect tense of the sentence "We ask Madame Mathias if she will sponsor our French club" is "We have asked Madame Mathias if she will sponsor our French club."
The present perfect tense of "ask" is "have asked."
The present perfect tense of the word ask is "have asked."
The present perfect tense of "ask" in this context is "have asked". For example, "You have asked Madame Mathias if she will sponsor your French club".
The present perfect tense of "ask" is "have asked" or "has asked", depending on the subject (I, you, we, they - have asked; he, she, it - has asked).
The present tense of "ask" is "asks" when referring to third person singular (he, she, it) and "ask" for all other subjects (I, you, we, they).
The present tense for the word "ask" is "asks." For example: "He asks her a question."
The word 'ask' is in the present tense.
The present tense of asked is ask.
Yes, "asked" is the past tense form of the verb "ask." In the present tense, it would be "ask."
... she has sponsored our ...
"Ask" is the present tense of the verb. The past tense of "ask" is "asked."
The past perfect tense of "ask" is "had asked."