Bad is an adjective, not a verb. Only verbs have tenses.
Past: bad, Present: bad, Future: will bad
Past tense refers to actions that have already happened, present tense refers to actions happening currently, and future tense refers to actions that will happen. Each tense has its own verb conjugations and is used to indicate the timing of the action being described.
"Bad" is an adjective. Adjectives do not have tense, thus there is no future tense of "bad".
The past tense of "bad" is "bad" and the past participle is "bad."
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 past participle of "bad" is "bad." This means that it stays the same in both the past tense and participle form.
Past tense refers to actions that have already happened, present tense refers to actions happening currently, and future tense refers to actions that will happen. Each tense has its own verb conjugations and is used to indicate the timing of the action being described.
"Bad" is an adjective. Adjectives do not have tense, thus there is no future tense of "bad".
The past tense of "come with bad" is "came with bad".
There's no past tense for the word "bad", because it's an adjective. Only verbs have a past tense.
The simple past tense is: you saw a bad accident.
The past tense of "bad" is "bad" and the past participle is "bad."
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.
There is no past tense for "felt". "felt" is the past tense of "feel". "You feel good today, but you felt bad yesterday."
The past participle of "bad" is "bad." This means that it stays the same in both the past tense and participle form.
i think that Darfur has the potential to become as bad as Rwanda, but isn't at the moment
Present participles are verbs that act as adjectives or adverbs and end in -ing. Therefore, the present participle of swear is swearing (i.e. The swearing man was fired from his job, as he was a bad influence on his coworkers).The past participle is easy- it's the past tense form of any verb. So the past participle of swear is swore (i.e. She swore so incessantly that her parents became concerned).
to change the past means the future changes and to remove a bad event from the past only leaves room for an even greater evil its a bad idea to think about the past with regret instead for for a better future