The future tense of "seek" is "will seek." The future tense of "bring" is "will bring."
An example of future tense would be:By the time he pays off his credit card debt, he will have run out of money. "Will have run" is the future tense.ANOTHER ANSWER:The verb "will have run" is not the future tense. It is the future perfect tense. Don't blame me, I did not make the English grammar rules. Not every verb that expresses some event happening in the future is the future tense. Unfortunately we have two tenses for future events. One is the plain vanilla future tense. The other is the Rocky Road style future perfect tense.An example of Future Tense (plain vanilla) is:"Nitpickers like the writer of this sentence will causemost people a lot of unnecessary grief, so avoid them in the future."An example of Future Perfect Tense (rocky road) is:If in the future you avoided nitpickers like the writer of this sentence, you will have saved yourself a lot of unnecessary grief."
The past tense of "step off" is "stepped off."
The past tense of "drop off" would be "dropped off".
The past tense of "tear off" is "tore off."
The past tense of "sign off" is "signed off."
An example of future tense would be:By the time he pays off his credit card debt, he will have run out of money. "Will have run" is the future tense.ANOTHER ANSWER:The verb "will have run" is not the future tense. It is the future perfect tense. Don't blame me, I did not make the English grammar rules. Not every verb that expresses some event happening in the future is the future tense. Unfortunately we have two tenses for future events. One is the plain vanilla future tense. The other is the Rocky Road style future perfect tense.An example of Future Tense (plain vanilla) is:"Nitpickers like the writer of this sentence will causemost people a lot of unnecessary grief, so avoid them in the future."An example of Future Perfect Tense (rocky road) is:If in the future you avoided nitpickers like the writer of this sentence, you will have saved yourself a lot of unnecessary grief."
The future tense of the verb 'take' is 'to take'or 'will take', 'shall take', 'might take' and so on..For example:We'd like to take dinner with the family. (future tense).We will take them to dinner tonight at Michael's restaurant. (future tense).Michael suggested we take seats near his wine room. (present tense).I thought of taking the seared prawns and fontina risotto. (noun, present tense).Our daughter is very taken with the chocolate and candied orange tart. (adjective, present tense).She has taken an evening off in order to join us. (past tense).Our son took the oysters in bloody Mary jelly at the bar before we arrived. (past tense).Michael urged us to take some Malaga white muscat with him later. (future tense).I bet we'll end up with the Louis XIII and those Cohiba cigars. I will take tomorrow off work. (future relaxed tense).
The future tense of the verb 'take' is 'to take'or 'will take', 'shall take', 'might take' and so on..For example:We'd like to take dinner with the family. (future tense).We will take them to dinner tonight at Michael's restaurant. (future tense).Michael suggested we take seats near his wine room. (present tense).I thought of taking the seared prawns and fontina risotto. (noun, present tense).Our daughter is very taken with the chocolate and candied orange tart. (adjective, present tense).She has taken an evening off in order to join us. (past tense).Our son took the oysters in bloody Mary jelly at the bar before we arrived. (past tense).Michael urged us to take some Malaga white muscat with him later. (future tense).I bet we'll end up with the Louis XIII and those Cohiba cigars. I will take tomorrow off work. (future relaxed tense).
Present tense of "To Melt": Melt ex: She melt the cover off of my phone by keeping it to close to the flame. Past Tense: Melted ex: She melted the cheese in the microwave with the chips to make nachos. Future tense: Melt ex: The ice cream will melt if she doesn't eat it faster. This type of word is a rare case in the American English language where the Future tense and Present tense is the same.
The past tense of "step off" is "stepped off."
The past tense of "drop off" would be "dropped off".
The past tense of "tear off" is "tore off."
The past tense of "sign off" is "signed off."
"Set off" does not have a past tense. The verb of it (to set off, did set off, will set off, have set off, had set off, ect.) will change based on the tense it is in.
The past tense of 'hold off' would be 'held off.'
The past tense of "turn off" is "turned off." For example, "I turned off the lights before leaving the room."
The past tense of the compound verb "lay off" is "laid off."