ordinary form
progressive form
emphatic form
"Have" is the present tense. For example, "I have three dogs."
present progressive, past progressive, and future progressive
the will in your sentence is present tense, so it is present tense
there are a lot but here are three: was, is, will be
Simple past tense. Past perfect tense. Past continuous tense.
were, are,will be
That would be present tense, past tense, and future tense.______No. The standard three forms are the infinitve, the simple past and the past participle. Examples:chat - chatted - chatted (regular)forget - forgot - forgotten (irregular)run - ran - run (irregular)
the simple tenses of verbsThe simple present and the simple past are termed "simple" because they are expressed by direct inflection on the verb. English verbs are not inflected for future tense, but expressions with the modal will are often spoken of as "future tense." Some grammars use the term tense to refer what are technically tense and aspect combinations: present perfect, past perfect, present progressive, past progressive, present perfect progressive, and past perfect progressive. Very occasionally, voice (i.e. passive) is treated as a kind of tense.Finally, some authorities use emphatic tense to refer to some or all constructions using the modal do. Only the basic present and past forms qualify as simple.(Present, Past, and Future)
"Have" is the present tense. For example, "I have three dogs."
There are three verb tenses. These are past, present and future tense. Consistent verb tense is when you use the same verb tense throughout your writing or speaking. Often people mistakenly go back and forth between different tenses.
Present tense, past tense and future tense.
The three simple tenses are:Past tenseFuture tensePresent tense
present progressive, past progressive, and future progressive
In the given text, "have ... died" is in the present perfect tense; "are ballooning" is in the present progressive tense; and "burst" is in the simple present tense.
Wet doesn't change from present to past tense or for the past participle. All three forms are wet.
I already answered it once: In the given text, "have ... died" is in the present perfect tense; "are ballooning" is in the present progressive tense; and "burst" is in the simple present tense.
The three simple tenses are:Past tenseFuture tensePresent tense