The word "thing" is a noun and so doesn't have a past tense. Only verbs have past tenses.
The past tense of "thing" is "thung."
Yes, the past tense of "eat" is "ate."
The past tense of "meet" is "met." For example: "I met my friend for lunch yesterday."
Yes, in Spanish, the past tense is commonly referred to as the preterite tense. It is used to indicate actions that were completed in the past at a specific point in time.
The past tense of the verb "to be" is "was" for singular subjects (I, he, she, it) and "were" for plural subjects (we, you, they).
the past tense of am is was and the past tense of has is had
The past tense of "meet" is "met." For example: "I met my friend for lunch yesterday."
Yes, the past tense of "eat" is "ate."
There is no such thing. Verbs have a past tense. "Cognition" is a noun.
The past perfect tense of "think" is "had thought."
present
As far as I know there is no such thing as the verb "are"; it is one of the present tense forms of the verb to be, which in the past tense becomes "were".You are > You were.
Any thing that happened in the past and is completed.
They're the same thing - the 'simple' is usually just missed out.Other forms of the past tense are:Past PerfectPast ContinuousPast Perfect Continuous
There is no past tense of past tense because it is not a verb. For instance, there is no past tense of the word 'desk' (there is no 'desked' or 'did desk', because desk is a noun, not a verb.Or it could mean: Past perfect.Past perfect is sometimes described as 'past in the past'. It is used to show that one thing in the past happened before another thing in the past.Example: The race had finished before the rain started.
The only thing i can think of is "had curiosity".
No they are not the same.
The past tense of the verb "to be" is "was" for singular subjects (I, he, she, it) and "were" for plural subjects (we, you, they).