The verb in the sentence is 'are doing,' so the past perfect tense would be 'have done.'
No. "How were your family doing?" makes reference to their family in the past tense. This implies they are dead.The proper way to form that sentence is "How is your family doing?". This refers to their family in the present tense.
The verb in this sentence is 'walk', but the form it takes is incorrect for this sentence. A few sentences with the correct form of 'walk' could be: The cat walks slowly. (present tense form). The cat is walking slowly. (present progressive form) The cat walked slowly. (past tense form)
The word "SEE" in the sentence is the base form of the verb "to see". Verbs have both form and tense. In this sentence, "see" is used in the present tense.
This type of verb phrase is called going to future.It has the form be + going to + verb.It can be used to talk about future intentions(as in your sentence).
Were. The subject of this sentence is plural (we) so the verb should be a plural verb, also the other verb (knew) is past tense. The past plural form of are is were. -- We knew we were in trouble.
No. "How were your family doing?" makes reference to their family in the past tense. This implies they are dead.The proper way to form that sentence is "How is your family doing?". This refers to their family in the present tense.
To convert a present tense sentence to past tense, you generally change the verb to its past tense form. For regular verbs, this involves adding '-ed' to the base form of the verb. For irregular verbs, the past tense form must be memorized. It is also important to make any necessary adjustments to the sentence structure for tense consistency.
To determine the tense of a sentence, look at the verb in the sentence. If the verb is in the past form (e.g., "walked"), the sentence is in the past tense. If the verb is in the present form (e.g., "walks"), the sentence is in the present tense. If the verb is in the future form (e.g., "will walk"), the sentence is in the future tense.
The past tense form of "am" is "was" or "were" depending on the subject of the sentence.
No, think is present tense. The past tense of think is thought.
The verbs will be in their present tense form. The sentence will be referring to something that is presently happening.
Replace the present tense form of the verb by the verb phrase "will [or shall] + [infinitive form of the verb]".
agree in tense. This means that all the verbs in the sentence are in the same form, either present, past, or future tense.
The past tense form of the verb "flies" in the sentence "the kite flies around her face" is "flew."
The future tense form of the verb "to learn" in that sentence would be "will learn." So the revised sentence is "you will learn about verbs."
To form the future of verbs in English, you need to use an auxiliary verb. The most common auxiliary verb used to form the future tense is "will": "will think" is the future tense of "think". Example: I don't know what to do, but I will think of something.
That is already in past tense form of the word think. The future tense of think is will think. or as I said "thoughted"