The homophone is the same word -- book.
The word book has three meanings:
book = something you read
book = reserve or make a reservation
book = an official charge against someone
A dictionary or a thesaurus would be helpful in finding the past tense of a word. Additionally, grammar resources or language textbooks can also aid in understanding verb conjugations for past tense forms.
A good dictionary will have the past tense, or past tense ending, and the participle or gerund (ing ending) of verb entries, as well as the phonetic pronunciation.
The past tense of book is booked.
Yes, "read" can be used as both the past tense and the present tense of the verb. For example, "I read a book yesterday" (past tense) and "I read a book every night" (present tense).
"Had used" is the past perfect tense.
No, a thesaurus is used to find synonyms and antonyms of words, not to determine the past tense of a verb. To find the past tense of a verb, you can consult a verb conjugation chart or a grammar resource.
Is can be used in the past tense if it's in its past tense form, which is was.
No, "have" is the present tense. (to have) The past tense would be "had".
If it is used as a noun, there is no past tense. However, if it is used as a verb the past tense would be fanned.
Yes, "will" is the past tense of "shall". For example, "I shall go tomorrow" becomes "I will go tomorrow".
Past tense is a verb form that indicates that an action or event took place in the past. It is used to convey that an action happened before the present moment.
A book report or book review is usually written in the first person past tense because it is about one's own opinion of reading it, which was done in the past. You can combine different tenses,There are different forms of past tense which could be used in different ways to imply different things about when it was read:* "I read this book." - simple past tense A plain statement about a past event. * "I have read this book" - present perfect simple tense Implies an "and now.." idea follows, such as "and I want to read more by the same author."* "I was reading this book." - past progressive tenseThis might introduce another thing that happened after reading it, such as "I was too bored/scared to finish it."* "I have been reading this book." - present perfect progressive tense This implies it took some time or is not finished. * "I had read this book." - past perfect simple tense Used if something happened after reading it, such as, "I wanted to read it again."* I had been reading this book. - past perfect progressive tense Combines the above two.
Read can be used in different ways for past tense and present tense. Present Tense: I think I am going to read this book someone suggested to me. Past Tense: I read that book when it came out around a year ago.
I used the past tense to answer this question.
"Be" can be used in various tenses, including present tense (am, is, are), past tense (was, were), and future tense (will be).