Embarrassment is a noun and does not have a present or past tense. Embarrass is the verb version ("Do not embarrass yourself.") and embarrassed is the past form of that verb ("The girl embarrassed her family when she started screaming at the store.")
Note that the adjective "embarrassed" has the same spelling as the past tense of the verb embarrass.
Noun: "The mother felt embarrassment regarding her daughter's outburst."
Adjective: "The embarrassed mother blushed because of her daughter's outburst."
Verb (past tense): "The daughter embarrassed her mother with an outburst."
In the present tense it is "I mean to say...".This is usually when I want immediately to clarify something I have just said.In the past tense it is "I meant to say...".This is usually to avoid the embarrassment of someone misinterpreting what I said in the past.
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". The past tense of "to be" is "was" or "were".
The past tense of "am" is "was" and the past perfect tense of "has" is "had."
HAD is the Past Tense of TO HAVE.
The past tense of "have" is "had."
Past tense I had Present tense I have Future Tense I will have
was is the past tense of am eg. 'I am' (now) but 'I was' (is past)
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).