It depends on how your are describing the expectation.
1. You can hope for the future.
2. I'm hoping to win the lottery.
3. He/she hopes to win the lottery.
4. I'd hoped to win the lottery.
These are the four ways that I know of, all which describe something that will happen. By definition hope is 'to expect something with uncertainty of it happening'.
Present tense: hope Past tense: hoped Future tense: will hope
Present: hope/hopes. Past: hoped. Future: will hope.
"He is going to accept the invitation for tomorrow's party" Accept is the future tense of the word accept. --- More commonly, the future tense is "will accept" i.e. "He will accept the invitation for tomorrow's party"
The future tense is will be.
The future tense is "will have"
Present tense: hope Past tense: hoped Future tense: will hope
Present: hope/hopes. Past: hoped. Future: will hope.
Present tense equals: Punish. Past tense is punished. Future tense is will have punished. Hope this helps.
It's 'will yawn'. Hope it's not wrong...
Spent is a past-tense verb. The present-tense form of spent is spending. The future-tense form of spent is will spend. Hope this helps!
"He is going to accept the invitation for tomorrow's party" Accept is the future tense of the word accept. --- More commonly, the future tense is "will accept" i.e. "He will accept the invitation for tomorrow's party"
The future tense is will be.
The future tense is "will have"
It refers to future happenings, so its pattern is this: will/shall + main verb hope it helps
No, get is present tense. The future tense is will get.
past tense is got future tense is will get
The future tense is will laugh.