The past tense of have is "had":
"I have a dog now."
"I had a dog a long time ago."
Do not confuse this with "have had", which describes a continuing condition:
"I have had a dog for five years."
The correct tense depends on what you are saying. Some examples using have as the main verb:
present simple - I have a new car. She has a new car. ( has is the third person singular form of have.)
past simple - I had a good holiday.
present continuous - I am having a good time.
past continuous - I was having a bad day.
present perfect - I have had a great holiday.
past perfect - I had had a bad day and was feeling sorry for myself.
will future - I will have a good holiday.
going to future - I am going to have a party next week.
The correct tenses of the verb "have" are present (have/has), past (had), and future (will have).
The correct past tense verb is "has hidden." The verb "has hidden" follows the pattern of forming past tense with "has" and the past participle form of the verb, in this case "hidden."
The correct conjugation of the verb "to be" in the indicative present tense is: I am You are He/she/it is We are You are They are
The verb tense is correct in the sentence: "She will be running in the race next weekend."
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 past tense of the verb 'shrink' is 'shrank' or 'shrunk', both are correct and commonly used.
The correct past tense verb is "has hidden." The verb "has hidden" follows the pattern of forming past tense with "has" and the past participle form of the verb, in this case "hidden."
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 correct verb tenses for "tell" are: Present: tell/tells Past: told Present participle: telling Past participle: told
whats the correct verb tense
Doppler isn't a verb.
Will buy
The past tense is paid.
The correct spelling is was (past tense of verb to be).
The correct conjugation of the verb "to be" in the indicative present tense is: I am You are He/she/it is We are You are They are
Either is correct depending on what you want to say, for example:Yes you did. (past tense of the verb 'do', a thing already done)Yes you can. (present tense verb for 'you are able')
"Agencies" isn't a verb and doesn't have a grammatical tense.
The correct tense is: was arguing