Well of course the pluralised past tense would be "tricks"
There is no past tense, it's a noun. So it is hypothesis. The plural form is hypothesi. 2nd Answer: . . . the commonly used plural, though, is hypotheses.
Worried is past tense. The present tense is worry.
The past tense is conducted.
The past tense is influenced.
The past tense of behave is behaved.
The plural past tense is were.I am - I wasHe, she, it is - he, she, it waswe are - we wereyou are - you werethey are - they were
Had is the past tense of have. Had does not have a plural, it is a past tense verb
There is no plural past tense of road. Road is a noun, not a verb.
The past tense of sing is sang. It is the same for singular and plural subjects.
It is the past tense of "have" and is used for both singular and plural. I had, we had, you had, he had, they had.
The past tense of have is had for both singular and plural subjects.
Present tense - you are. Past tense - you were.
It depends on how it is being used, but the past tense of the verb "to be" would be "been", and the plural form could be either "has been", "were", "was", or "have been".
The past tense of "will" is "would". The past tense of "to be" is "was" or "were".
The past tense of finish is finished. The past tense of be is was/were.
No. Verbs do not have a plural form. The verb "were" is the past tense of is or are.
Were already is past tense. It is used for plural subjects in the first, second, and third person.