Fall is the present tense of the past participle fallen.
The present perfect tense of fell (to knock, strike, or cut something down) is have felled. Fell is also the past tense of fall. The present perfect tense of fall is have fallen.
The word "fall" can be past tense, present tense, or future tense depending on the context in which it is used. For example, "I fell" is past tense, "I am falling" is present tense, and "I will fall" is future tense.
The past perfect tense of "fall" is "had fallen."
The verb is is the present tense.
The past tense of did is did. The present tense of did is do. The future tense of did is will do.
The present perfect tense of fell (to knock, strike, or cut something down) is have felled. Fell is also the past tense of fall. The present perfect tense of fall is have fallen.
Past perfect tense.
The word "fall" can be past tense, present tense, or future tense depending on the context in which it is used. For example, "I fell" is past tense, "I am falling" is present tense, and "I will fall" is future tense.
The present perfect forms are have fallen and has fallen.Examples:The leaves have fallen. (plural subject)The temperature has fallen. (singular subject)
The past perfect tense of "fall" is "had fallen."
The verb is is the present tense.
The past tense of did is did. The present tense of did is do. The future tense of did is will do.
It was, (past tense) it is, (present tense) it will be( future tense)
Past tense I had Present tense I have Future Tense I will have
"Fell" is the past tense of "fall" and is used when referring to an action that happened in the past. "Fallen" is the past participle of "fall" and is used with auxiliary verbs like "have" to form complex tenses. For example, "He fell from the tree yesterday" (past tense) versus "They have fallen asleep" (past participle).
"Fallen" is the past participle; "fell" is the simple past tense.
"Has" is in present tense. The past tense is "had".