I found the summary on this GSN page:
It is an eBook.
Have is in present tense. Had is past tense. I have a banana. - present I had a banana. - past
Present tense: He reads a book. Past tense: He read a book. Past participle: He has read a book. Progressive: He is reading a book.
The falling leaves are blown into piles by the wind. (present participle-falling) Only a twisted pile of rubble remained. (past participle-twisted) The book had many torn pages. (past participle-torn) They mourned the comrades killed in the war. (participial phrase-killed in the war)
The past tense of "hold" is "held," and the present tense is "hold." For example: "He held the book yesterday" (past tense) and "He holds the book today" (present tense).
"Lay" is the past tense of "Lie" which is the present tense.
The past tense of twist is twisted.
Twisted is the past participle of twist.
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).
Tenses are applicable to verbs(i.e. words describing actions), not adjectives(words describing a quality of a noun). Evil is an adjective. It can't have any past/present/future tense.
No. The past tense version of have is had. Example: I had 2 dollars, but I spent it on gum.
No it was a book about Ebeneser Scrooge and that's what was in the book
SHOW HIM THE PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE