The sun rises in the east
Creep is the simple present tense.
present tense and future tense
The present perfect tense is created with have/has + a past participle.I/We/You/They have recycledHe/She/It has recycled
Future tense.
I/you/we/they scrub. He/she/it scrubs.
The simple present tense is the one-word tense that is used for regularly repeated actions, emotions, occupations, general truths. For example, The earth revolves around the sun. is a sentence in the simple present tense.
There is no example because a "simple present tense future" makes no sense.
Yes when people refer to the "present tense" they often mean the "simple present tense". The other present tenses are normally referred to as such. For example, the "present perfect tense".Also:It is called present simple or simple present because it has one verb.
No it's simple present tense.
Past tense: She walked to the store yesterday. Present perfect tense: She has walked to the store multiple times this week.
The correct verb tense for "isn't" is present tense (or simple present). It is a contraction of "is not." For example, "He isn't going to the party."
The simple present tense is used to describe actions that happen regularly, habitual actions, general truths, or facts. It is formed by using the base form of the verb. For example, "I eat breakfast every morning."
The general present tense is "Recall". Simple present is "Recalls". Present continuous tense is "Am/is/are recalling". Present perfect tense is "has/have recalled" and present perfect continuous tense is "Has/have been recalling". The general past tense is "recalled". Simple past - "Recalled". Past continuous- "Was recalling/ were recalling". Past perfect - "Had recalled". Past perfect continuous- "Had been recalling".
The present simple tense of "to answer" is: I/you/we/they answer he/she/it answers
The simple present tense of "get" is "gets" for third person singular (he/she/it) and "get" for all other pronouns (I, you, we, they).
the simple present tense and the present tense.
The simple present tense of can is just can.