Air Force weapons? Or Army weapons? Or Naval Weapons?
Or
Types of Artillery? Or Types of Small Arms (rifles, pistols, etc.)? Or Tanks? Or Warships?
United States and Germany.
You must be 35, a natural born citizen of the United States, and have lived in the United States for the past 9 years.
Set could be past or present because the present, past and past participle are all the same egset / set / set
"is' is present tense. For past tense use was or were.
It is an adverb, not a verb,; it can accompany a Present, a Past, a Present Perfect, a Past Perfect and a Future verb.
Elias Child has written: 'Genealogy of the Child, Childs and Childe families of the past and present in the United States and the Canadas, from 1630-1881' 'Genealogy of the Child, Childs and Childe families, of the past and present in the United States and the Canadas from 1630 to 1881'
Nurse Corps - United States Army -'s motto is 'Embrace the past - Engage the present - Envision the future'.
One thing about past and present fashion is that the history of fashion tends to repeat itself. Trends like tie-dyed shirts and dresses are popular today and were also popular in the 1960's in the United States.
Yes, "states" is the past tense form of the verb "state."
Willard Allen Fletcher has written: 'United States-German relations, past and present' -- subject(s): Foreign relations
Secularism is the absence of the influence of religion on the government of a nation. It is predominately practiced in the United States of America and other representative democracies of the past and present. This is a very complicated question, really, and this is a very simplified answer.
Charles Lyell.
President Eisenhower was the one who made Veterans Day a national Holiday. The holiday is for all past and present members of the United States Armed Forces.
United States and Germany.
No. President Ford pardoned former President Nixon for any past crimes committed against the United States. No pardon can apply to crimes committed in the future of when the pardon is granted.
No, but they must have been a US Citizen for the past nine years.
Have is present tense. The past tense is had.