wished
as in "I wished that my prince/ss would come, and s/he did!"
The past tense of wish is wished. ex) "I wish I had a pony" and "I wished for a pony"
The past tense for wish is wished.
The past tense of "to wish" is "wished."
The past tense ending "ed" in "wish" is considered regular. The verb "wish" follows the regular verb conjugation pattern of adding "ed" to form the past tense.
The tense used after "wish" depends on the context and the desired meaning. When expressing a present or future unreal situation, "wish" is followed by a past simple tense. For example: "I wish I had studied more." However, when expressing a past unreal situation, "wish" is followed by a past perfect tense. For example: "I wish I had gone to the party last night."
The past tense of wish is wished. ex) "I wish I had a pony" and "I wished for a pony"
The past tense for wish is wished.
The past tense of "to wish" is "wished."
The past tense ending "ed" in "wish" is considered regular. The verb "wish" follows the regular verb conjugation pattern of adding "ed" to form the past tense.
The tense used after "wish" depends on the context and the desired meaning. When expressing a present or future unreal situation, "wish" is followed by a past simple tense. For example: "I wish I had studied more." However, when expressing a past unreal situation, "wish" is followed by a past perfect tense. For example: "I wish I had gone to the party last night."
The present tense of have is have. As in 'I have'. If you wish this to be clarified, the perfect tense is 'I have had' the past tense is 'I had' and the future is 'I will have'
The past tense of "long" (meaning to wish or desire) would be "longed". "Long" (the measurement or description of length) is not a motion / verb / action and would not change form from present tense into past tense.
'were' is used when you wish to talk in past tense. it is the past tense version of 'are' examples: the men were hunting the fox. those days were very difficult for me.
Wish is an abstract noun and a verb. Noun: Make a wish! Verb: Wish for world peace.
The future tense of wish is "will wish"
The past participle (and simple past) is willed.The word will is used specifically to indicate something that is going to happen in the future; it has no applicability to the past, and has no past tense. I will go to the store, in the future. I did go to the store, in the past. This is correct for the auxiliary verb will. However, it ignores the (posibly obsolete) use of "will" as an ordinary verb, meaning "wish". In that usage, there is a past tense form, "would".
the past tense of am is was and the past tense of has is had