I/you/we/they go. He/she/it goes. The present participle is going.
going <Supv. note: this is the present progressive or the gerund.> Present perfect is "have/has + gone"
go - have/has goneShe has gone to the mail room. We have gone to the cinema. They haven't gone on holiday.
FUTURE: going PRESENT: go PAST: gone
"I am going" is already in present tense.Past tense: "I have gone."Future tense: "I will go."
No actually both of them is past tense.
Present perfect tense - have/has gone. Present perfect continuous tense - have/has been going. Past perfect tense - had gone. Past perfect continuous tense - had been going. Future perfect tense - will have gone. Future perfect continuous tense - will have been going.
have gone
answer Surely this is the same as saying "she is red" and so is in the present tense. Answer: This is a passive construction in the present simple tense.
the will in your sentence is present tense, so it is present tense
Heard is not the present perfect tense of went. Heard is the simple past tense and past participle of hear. Went is the simple past tense of go. Gone is the past participle of go.The present perfect tense is created with the auxiliary verbs has and have + a past participle.The present perfect tense of hear:I/We/You/They have heardHe/She/It has heardThe present perfect tense of go:I/We/You/They have goneHe/She/It has gone
The answer is "go/goes".
No. You cannot say I have went somewhere. You can say: 1. I went there. (simple form of past tense) or 2. I have gone there. (present perfect tense)