The present perfect tense of protest is:
The present perfect tense of "protest" is "have/has protested."
The present perfect tense is has or have judged.Examples:He has judged the case. (singular subject)They have judged the case. (plural subject)
The present perfect is formed with - have/has + past participle.Provide is a regular verb so the past participle of provide is provided.Present perfect of provide = have / has provided.I have provided an answer for you.She has provided nothing.
The past tense of protest is protested.
The past perfect tense is had set.
The present tense of "judge" is "judge."
The present tense of protest is:I/You/We/They protest.He/She/It protests.The present participle is protesting.
There are two forms of the present perfect tense: simple present perfect (I have eaten) and progressive present perfect (I have been eating). Both forms use "have" or "has" with the past participle of the main verb to indicate an action that started in the past and has relevance to the present.
Present perfect tense.
The present perfect tense of "hid" is "have/has hidden."
Actually, "have" is the present tense form for first and second person plural (I, you, we, they) while "has" is the present tense form for third person singular (he, she, it). For example: "I have, you have, we have, they have" versus "he has, she has, it has."
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 present perfect tense of "are" is "have been."
The six tenses in English are present, past, future, present perfect, past perfect, and future perfect. Each tense indicates when an action or state of being occurred in relation to the present moment.
The present perfect tense of leave is have/has left. The present perfect tense of eat is have/has eaten.
The present perfect tense of "exist" is "has/have existed."
No, "were" is not present perfect. Present perfect is formed by using the past participle along with the auxiliary verb "have" or "has". For example, "have gone", "has eaten".
The 6 forms of perfect tenses are: present perfect, past perfect, future perfect, present perfect continuous, past perfect continuous, and future perfect continuous.