The past tense of "ready" is "readied."
'Ready' is mainly adjectival (as in 'are you ready', 'ready money', 'ready for action', etc. etc.) and never appears in the form of a verb, so it has no past tense.
"Has" is the present tense form of the verb "have." The past tense form of "has" is "had."
struck is the past tense verbStruck IS the past tense form...of the word strike.
Readied. Example: The teacher had readied all the students for their tests.
The past tense form of "lay" is "laid."
'Ready' is mainly adjectival (as in 'are you ready', 'ready money', 'ready for action', etc. etc.) and never appears in the form of a verb, so it has no past tense.
The outline WAS ready.
Formed is the past tense of form.
The past tense of "lay" is "laid." For example, "I laid the book on the table."
The past tense form of "lay" is "laid."
Is and are are present tense form of be. The past tense of be is was/were.
struck is the past tense verbStruck IS the past tense form...of the word strike.
The past tense form of "destroy" is "destroyed."
To is not a verb and does not have a past tense form.
Is can be used in the past tense if it's in its past tense form, which is was.
The past perfect tense of "form" is "had formed".
"He hit you" is the past tense form. Hit is an irregular verb and the past tense form is also "hit".