It's scatter for I/We/They/You.
It's scatters for He/She.
"Tense" in grammar is a formal characteristic of verbs, usually expressed by alternative forms of the verbs by inflection of the root form of a verb and/or compounding the root form with at least one additional word. In English, tense indicates the following characteristics of the meaning of verbs: 1. The time, compared to the time of speaking or writing, of the action or state of being expressed by the verb, that is, present, past, or future. 2. Whether the action or state of being described in item 1 above is, at the time stated in item 1: complete, as in a perfect tense; definitely ongoing, as in a progressive tense; or may be either complete or ongoing, as in a simple tense. 3. Whether the action is definite, as in a simple tense, or only possible, as in a conditional tense.
Collision is a noun not a verb. The verb form is collide, and the past tense is collided.
The word prediction is a noun. The plural form is predictions.
Lightning can be used as a noun (bolt of lightning) or an adjective (lightning fast). It is not a verb, so it does not have a past tense form.
"blown" is correct to use with the auxiliary verb "has". A past participle is needed to create the perfect verb tenses. "The gale force wind has blown the roof off the garage." (present perfect)
to be * I am * you are * he/she/it is * we are * they are to have * I have * you have * he/she/it has * we are * they are
I am, you/we are, he/she/it is.
Indulge/indulges is the correct present tense form.
I/you/we/they defend. He/she/it defends. The present participle is defending.
I/you/we/they enjoy. He/she/it enjoys. The present participle is enjoying.
the correct answer is: I am interested in working....
"Is" is the present tense form of the verb "to be" and "has" is the present tense form of the verb "to have."
The present tense form of the word "have" is "have".
The verb is is the present tense.
"Can" is in its present tense form.
Is is the present tense.
"Does she speak to you?" is the correct interrogative form.