present -- stop / stops / stopping
past -- stopped
will future -- will stop
going to future -- am/is/are going to stop
Stop is neither future tense nor past tense. It's present tense. The future tense is will stop, and the past tense is stopped.
Past tense - stopped. Present tense - I stop - He/she/it stops Future tense - will stop, going to stop, am/is/are stopping.
Verbs that double the end of the last letter in the past tense include "stop" (stopped), "refer" (referred), and "occur" (occurred).
The following are regular verbs: stop, drop, shout, drag, shrug, jump, smile, scream, start, answer. They are regular verbs because you mark their past tense by adding 'd' or 'ed'. The following list of ten words are irregular verbs: come, go, see, write, catch, drink, do, bring, think, begin. They are irregular verbs because their past tense markers are not fixed--their spellings are just different.
In the past if there is no life then we wouldn't be here but in the future life doesn't stop, it goes on and on.
you stop getting presents when you quit believeing : )
there is a point in preserving the past because it will help us with clues and the experience to solve problems in the future it is only if the past hurts that we have to learn our lesson from and stop thinking about what happened.
STOPThe past participle is STOPPED.Example: The boy was running, and then he stopped.The future participle is STOP.Example: Tomorrow, you will stop.The present participle is STOPPING.Example: The boy is stopping.The infinitive is STOP.Example: You must know how to stop.
The past of stop is stopped
The past form of stop (and also the past participle)is stopped.
We can't know what the future will look like unless we invent a time machine. However, you can also say that we are constantly experiencing the future as we are "traveling" into the future at a rate of 1sec/1sec. Future/past is also a relative term, as we are in the future compared to a second ago and we are in the past compared to a second into the future. This is getting confusing so I will stop here. Sorry I didn't answer the question properly.
Stopped is the past tense for the verb "stop"