Compounded.
The past tense of the compound verb "lay off" is "laid off."
No. Grabbed is the past tense of the verb grab
The past tense of the verb "hear" is "heard". If you mean the word as in, "My hearing is quite good," the word is a gerund in that case, and has no past tense. The compound auxiliary verb progressive "be hearing" has the past tense "was hearing", perfective "have heard" has the past tense "had heard", and progressive-perfective "have been hearing" has the past tense "had been hearing".
The compound word for carousel is merry-go-round.
the past tense of am is was and the past tense of has is had
The past tense of "has" is "had" and 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
"Past indicative" is a tense, a property of verbs. In the sentence as written, however, "past indicative" is a compound noun, the name of the tense.
"will be" is the future tense of "be". The past tense of "be" is "was/were".
No, "remembered" is not a compound word. It is derived from the verb "remember" by adding the past tense suffix "-ed."
The past tense is she did.
The word "were" is past tense. It is the past tense of the verb "to be."