The past tense of amaze is amazed.
Destroyed is the past tense of destroy...therefore there is not a past tense for destroyed.
The past tense is smote.
"Responsible" is an adjective. It does not have a past tense. Instead, the past tense would apply to the word before. (Present - she is responsible, Past - she was responsible.)
The word 'at' is not a verb and so doesn't have a past tense.
The past tense of rip is ripped.
The past tense of the informal verb to wow (to amuse or amaze) is "wowed."
Amaze is the verb form. The present tense is amaze/amazes; the past tense is amazed. Amazed and amazing are the participle forms.
Adjective.
The word amazed is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to amaze'. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective. Examples: verb: We were amazed that everyone survived the crash. adjective: The amazed class listened intently to the story of Ernest Shackleton. The noun forms for the verb to amaze are amazement and the gerund, amazing.
the past tense of am is was and the past tense of has is had
The past tense of get is got. For isn't a verb and so doesn't have a past tense. The past tense of has is had. Had is already the past tense. The past tense of have is had.
Was and were are both the past tense of be. The present tense is: I am he is you are they are The past tense is: I was he was you were they were
The past tense of "will" is "would" and the past tense of "be" is "was" or "were" depending on the subject (singular or plural).
Wrote is past tense. It is the past tense of write.Wrote is already a past tense.
The past tense of "finish" is "finished". The past tense of "be" is "was" (singular) or "were" (plural).
The three kinds of past tense are simple past, past continuous, and past perfect. Simple past is used to describe a completed action at a specific time, past continuous describes an action that was ongoing in the past, and past perfect is used to show that one action in the past happened before another.
The past tense of "exist" is "existed." The past perfect tense is "had existed."