I begin, you begin, we begin, he begins, they begin.
The present progressive tense of begin:I am beginning.You/We/They are beginning.He/She/It is beginning.
"Erase" is the present tense of the verb. "Erased" is the past tense. Erasure is the noun form.
* I am * you/we/they are * he/she/it is
Begin is used in present tense sentences, and begun is used in past tense sentences. For example: "I will begin the project." "It has already begun."
The word "SEE" in the sentence is the base form of the verb "to see". Verbs have both form and tense. In this sentence, "see" is used in the present tense.
No, "began" is the past tense of the verb "begin." The present participle form of the verb "begin" is "beginning."
No, "begun" is not a present tense verb. It is the past participle form of the verb "begin" and is used to create past perfect or present perfect tense. The present tense of "begin" is "begins" (third person singular) or "begin" (first/second person singular and all plural forms).
Begin is the present tense. The present tense, third person singular conjugation is begins.
The present tense of "begin" is "begins" for third person singular (he, she, it) and "begin" for all other pronouns (I, you, we, they).
Began is past tense. Begin is present tense.Sample text:"Let's begin at the beginning. It was early last year that I first began to realise that my memory was not good as I had thought. But I can't remember what it was that made me realise this."
The present tense of begun is begin.
Begin is the present tense of began.
The present tense form of "were" is "are."
"Is" is the present tense form of the verb "to be" and "has" is the present tense form of the verb "to have."
The present tense form of the word "have" is "have".
The verb is is the present tense.
"Can" is in its present tense form.