For wind meaning turn or twist, it is wound (rhymes with pound). For wind meaning tire or give air to, it is winded.
"wound the clock" is past tense.
The past perfect tense of 'wind' is had wound.Example: She had wound a ribbon in her hair.The past perfect tense of 'wind' is had winded.Example: He had winded himself by taking the stairs.
Wound
Wound up.
Blow. Example: The bomb will eventually blow. The wind will blow tomorrow. It is blow for both present and future tense. Unlike past tense-- the wind has blown down my house.
"wound the clock" is past tense.
The past tense for "wind" is "wound" and for "sweep" is "swept."
The past perfect tense of 'wind' is had wound.Example: She had wound a ribbon in her hair.The past perfect tense of 'wind' is had winded.Example: He had winded himself by taking the stairs.
Wound
wound.
wounded wound is also the past tense of wind, as in "I wound up the rope."
Wound up.
winded swept
Abate is a regular verb so the past tense is made by adding -edabated = past - The wind abated after the storm.abate/abates = present - They waited for the crowd's fury to abate. Her enthusiasm abates after a while.
The past tense of "wind" can be pronounced as either ˈwΔ«nd\ (rhymes with "find") or ˈwind\ (rhymes with "binned"). Both pronunciations are considered correct.
Blow. Example: The bomb will eventually blow. The wind will blow tomorrow. It is blow for both present and future tense. Unlike past tense-- the wind has blown down my house.
the past tense of am is was and the past tense of has is had