Draw is present tense. I draw. You draw. They draw. He draws. Drawing is the present participle.
The simple present tense is:
Drawing is the present participle.
"can be drawn" is a present tense form. The past tense form is "could be drawn".
We won't write the description for you but we will help you learn how to do so yourself.The key element is that the descriptions should be in the present tense. This means that all the verbs you use should be in the present tense. (For example, the picture is rather than the picture was.)
paints. For example: He paints a picture.
Memory drawing is exactly what it sounds like: pulling images from your memory and putting it down on paper. Imaginative drawing is thinking up something randomly and decide to draw. Imaginative drawing could be thinking of a fairy, or a dragon and then drawing it, or it could be just drawing whatever you feel. While memory does play a huge part in imaginative drawing, it is not the basis.
A charcoal drawing means exactly what it sounds like, a drawing made with a piece of charcoal instead of a pencil. Charcoal made just for drawing can be found in an art supply store or department. Artists that use charcoal for drawing like it because it produces sharp or soft lines and is easily smudged with the finger to create shadowing.
Present - I/You/We/They draw. He/She/It draws. The present participle is drawing. Past tense - drew. Future tense - will draw. going to draw. am/is/are drawing - I am drawing my picture tomorrow
The Attorneys are drawing up the contracts for the merge
The word 'drawing' is both a verb and a noun.The word drawing is the present participle, present tense of the verb to draw.The present participle of the verb is a gerund, a verbal noun.Examples:The artist was drawing an outline for his mural. (verb)The drawing of the sailboat was beautifully done. (noun)The first prize in the drawing is a television. (noun)
Present tense is used to describe things that are happening now or are generally true. Past tense is used to describe things that have already happened.
The past progressive tense follows this structure:Subject + had + been + present participle.e.g. I had been drawing.
The verb is is the present tense.
"Has" is in present tense. The past tense is "had".
Present perfect tense.
the present of did is didnt Do is the present tense of did. Didn't is the past negative form
The present tense of "will be" is "am/is/are." For example, "I am," "he is," "they are."
The past tense of did is did. The present tense of did is do. The future tense of did is will do.
"Has" is the present tense form of the verb "have." The past tense form of "has" is "had."