There isn't such a thing as a "plural" or "singular" tense. The tenses are either Present, Past or Future (broadly speaking, there are several subcategories). Singular/plural refer to Number. "Hot" is an adjective, therefore is has neither tense, nor number, only degrees of comparison.
There is no plural form of the word 'got'. It is the past tense of the word 'get'. The word get means 'to receive' or 'to acquire'.
Rang is a verb it is the past tense of ring. Verbs don't usually have plural forms.Verbs do have a third person singular form which is verb + s.We ring the hospital everyday. Plural subject - no change to the verb.She rings the hospital everyday. Singular subject - verb +s.There are some verbs however that have singular and plural forms:singular / plural = am, is was / are, were, does / do, has / have
The plural is cocoas, when referring to various types of processed cocoa, or when ordering more than one cup of the hot drink.
present tense past tense future tense present perfect tense past perfect tense future perfect tense present progressive tense past progressive tense future progressive tense present perfect progressive tense past perfect progressive tense future perfect progressive tense
The future tense.
The plural present tense of "to be" is "are."
They are.
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.
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 sing is sang. It is the same for 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".
No. Verbs do not have a plural form. The verb "were" is the past tense of is or are.
Well of course the pluralised past tense would be "tricks"
are