Drive/Driving
Strike is the present tense, and struck is the past tense and past participle.
That would be "strike".
The present tense of "struck" is "strike."
the past tence of drive is drove. Drive is present and drove is drove!there are so many site of online conjugation verbs :P
'Driving' can be used in any tense: I was driving, I am driving, I will be driving.====Also, remember, 'Driving' is not a verb. It is a gerund. 'Drive' and 'drove' are present and past tense verbs. In the above examples, 'was,' 'am' and '(will) be' are the verbs.
Struck is the past tense and past participle of strike. Striking is the present participle.
Yes, drove is the past tense of drive.
Yes. If it was present tense, it would be strike.
The simple past tense is drove. The past participle is driven.
Drove is the simple past tense of Drive. The past participle is Driven. To Drive is an irregular verbThe past tense of drove is droved.
Here's three examples: Present tense, I drive my son to school; Past tense, I drove my son to school;and Future tense, I will drive my son to school.
Drove is the simple past tense.