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The third person plural present tense of the verb increase is (they) increase.
A simple tense only has one verb eg present simple/past simple. All future forms have more than one verb so there is no future simple tense.
The word "are" is a verb, the plural present tense form of the verb "to be."
It is a Present Tense.
I imagine.
'Have' is of the verb 'to have'. 'is' is of the verb 'to be'.
Yes, is and am are present tense forms of be.
As far as I know there is no such thing as the verb "are"; it is one of the present tense forms of the verb to be, which in the past tense becomes "were".You are > You were.
The present tense of the verb to sleep is "sleep or sleeps".
were, are,will be
This is the imperfect tense. (verb)= present tense (verb)ed= perfect tense was (verb)ing= imperfect tense Perfect and imperfect are both forms of the past tense.
"The child" takes the third person singular conjugation of a verb. For the verb be, present tense is "is", and past tense is "was".
Past tense - I was eating. They were eating. Was and Were are the past tense forms of the verb "to be". The present tense forms are: is, am and are. She is eating. I am eating. We are eating.
Present tense verbs can have different forms. For example: Talk can be a present tense verb -- They talk too much. Talk is the base form of the verb Talks is a present tense verb -- She talks too much. Talks is the base verb + -s talking is a present tense verb -- she is talking too much. Talking is the base verb + -ing
No. The word "is" (along with are) represents the present tense of the verb to be.The past tense forms are was and were.
The progressive present tense follows this structure:Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Be" + Verb + -ing.
The present tense of the verb 'was' is is.