Henry studies hard at school.
Study is the present tense. Studied is the past tense.
No, "studied" is a past tense verb. The present tense form of "studied" is "study."
The simple present tense of study is study/studies.I studyWe studyYou studyHe/She/It studiesThey study
The present continuous tense of study is "am/is/are studying." For example, "I am studying," "He is studying," "They are studying."
The present perfect tense of the verb "study" is "have studied."
Study is the present tense. Studied is the past tense.
No, "studied" is a past tense verb. The present tense form of "studied" is "study."
Study is present tense.
"He studies" in the sentence "He studies English in the school" is present tense. "He has studied" is past tense. "He will study" is future tense.
The simple present tense of study is study/studies.I studyWe studyYou studyHe/She/It studiesThey study
The present continuous tense of study is "am/is/are studying." For example, "I am studying," "He is studying," "They are studying."
The present perfect tense of the verb "study" is "have studied."
The present tense of "study" is "studies" for third person singular (he/she/it) and "study" for all other persons (I/you/we/they).
The present perfect tense of the verb "study" is "have studied."
'study' is both present and future tense e.g. "I will study tonight."
stidiedhas studied because this leaves a sense of present tense where as will study is future tense and had studied is past tense and to put stuied is a simlpe form of the past tense.
To convert present tense to past tense, change the verb to its past form (e.g., "run" to "ran"). To convert present tense to future tense, add the helping verb "will" before the base form of the verb (e.g., "run" to "will run").