The proper past tenses of "lead" are "led" for the verb meaning to guide or direct, and "lead" for the noun referring to the metal.
The past tenses of "lonely" are "lonelied" and "lonely" itself.
The past tenses of "bring" are "brought" for the simple past and "had brought" for the past perfect.
The three tenses of the verb "lie" are present (lie), past (lay), and past participle (lain).
The tenses of "steal" are steal (present), stole (past), and stolen (past participle).
Actually, the basic verb tenses are present, past, and future. Singular and plural refer to the number of subjects in a sentence, not the tenses of the verbs.
"Jennifer" is a noun, a Proper Noun = a name. Only verbs have tenses, therefore "Jennifer" has no Past Tense whatsoever.
had.
Past tense - petted. Present tense - pet/petting. Future tense - will pet.
The three main verb tenses in English are present, past, and future. Present tense refers to actions happening now or regularly. Past tense refers to actions that have already happened. Future tense refers to actions that will happen at a later time.
Past tense is act or action done in the past.The past tenses include the simple past, past perfect, past continuous, and past perfect continuous.
The simple past tense and simple present tense are different verb forms. The simple past tense is used to describe actions that have already happened, while the simple present tense is used to describe actions that are happening now or regularly occur.
Present - am, is, are. Past - was, were.
The past tense is went.
"had not" is the past tense of "have not". (not is an adverb and does not have tenses)
The four tenses are past, present, future, and present perfect. Each tense is used to indicate the time frame in which an action or event is happening or has happened.
Yes, they are the basic tenses.
The three standard tenses are forget, forgot, forgotten.