The present tense of "sent" is "send."
The present tense of the word "sent" is "send."
"Send" is present tense; "Sent" is past tense.
The present perfect tense of "send" is "have/has sent."
"have send" is an incorrect formation of the present perfect tense. The present perfect is created with have/has + past participle. The present perfect tense of send is have sent. The past tense of send is sent, and the past perfect tense is had sent.
"Sent" is the past tense of the verb "send."
"have send" is an incorrect formation of the present perfect tense. The present perfect is created with have/has + past participle. The present perfect tense of send is have sent. The past tense of send is sent, and the past perfect tense is had sent.
Both are correct, the only difference is that "has sent" is in present tense and "had sent" is in past tense.e.g. Mike has sent me a letter. (present tense)Mike had sent me a letter. (past tense)
"Send" is present tense; "Sent" is past tense.
"Have been sent" is in the present perfect passive tense. It is formed by combining the auxiliary verb "have" with the past participle "sent," indicating that the action occurred in the past and has relevance to the present.
"Sent" is the past tense of the verb "send."
The present tense of the word "sent" is "send."
The present perfect tense of "send" is "have/has sent."
"Sent" is the past tense of the verb "send." It indicates that an action of sending something has already occurred in the past.
is sent implies a present tense action while was sent implies a past tense action.
Yes, "send" is the present tense form of the verb "send." It is used to describe actions that are currently happening or habitual actions in the present.
The present tense of "send" is "sends" for third person singular (he, she, it) and "send" for all other pronouns (I, you, we, they).
Were sent is past tense and are sent is not. Examples: Sally asked her coworker, "How do I know when invoices are sent to customers?" (are is a present tense, plural verb) The coworker replied, "You know the invoices were sent by checking the computer records." (were is a past tense, plural verb)