Had.
Example:
Yesterday I had too much to drink.
Today I have a hangover!
was/were sleeping = Past Continuous Tense
Formed is the past tense. Form is the present tense.
"He hit you" is the past tense form. Hit is an irregular verb and the past tense form is also "hit".
Again is an adverb, not a verb. It does not have a past tense form.
Entry is a noun, not a verb. The verb form is enter, and the past tense is entered.
No, "have" is not a past tense verb. It is an auxiliary verb used to form the perfect tenses in English, such as "I have eaten." The past tense form of "have" is "had."
To is not a verb and does not have a past tense form.
"Have" can be both a verb (e.g., "I have a cat") and an auxiliary verb that helps form tenses (e.g., "I have eaten"). In the latter case, it is part of a verb phrase indicating a past action that is connected to the present.
The past tense of "that" is "that." It remains the same in the past tense.
Yes it's just the past tense form of the verb.
Arrival is not a verb and does not have a past tense. Arrive is the verb form, and arrived is the past tense and past participle.
The word synchronized is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb synchronize.
Yes it's a past tense form of the verb "be".
"Is" is the present tense form of the verb "to be" and "has" is the present tense form of the verb "to have."
This is past tense. Although the verb give is in the present form the tense is shown by the auxiliary verb do, which is in the past - did.
The past emphatic tense is formed by adding the basic present form of the verb to the past tense of the verb to do(did).
The word partnership does not have a past tense as it is a noun and not a verb. The past tense of the verb form 'partner' is partnered.