Break up is already in the present tense.
Past tense: broke Present tense: break Future tense: will break
The presence tense is "break" unless the subject is third person singular, for which the proper form is "breaks". (This is the simple present tense.)
"Which" is present tense and "will break" is future tense.
Yes. Past tense: Broke Present tense: break Future tense: Will break
break - singular breaking - plural
The present perfect tense of "break" is "has/have broken." For example, "I have broken my phone."
The present tense of broken is:I/You/We/They break.He/She/It breaks.The present participle is breaking.
That is the present tense (sort of) She is breaking our relationship is better.
BROKE is the past tense of BROKE. The present tense is BREAK or BREAKING.
The past tense of "break up" is "broke up."
"Get" is the present tense of the verb "to get." For example, "I get up early every morning."
The word 'broke' is already the past tense of the word 'break'.The present perfect tense is 'have broken'.