"Dance" is a regular verb; therefore, its past participle is "danced".
The past tense is danced. Dance is a regular verb so the past is verb + ed
Well the past tense of word dance would be "word danced".
The past tense is danced.
future: dance present: dancing past: danced
will dance
danced; dance/[am/are/is] dancing; will dance/[am/are/is] going to dance
Simple present tense will add an "s" to the third-person singular of a regular verb: To take --> I take, you take, he/she/it takes; we take, they take Simple past will add an "ed" to the end of a regular verb: To dance --> I danced, you danced, he/she/it danced; we danced, they danced
The simple past is had.
The past simple of "have" is "had."
Past simple and simple past are both the same thing. They are both the past tense of a verb.
"Dance" is a regular verb; therefore, its past participle is "danced".
The verb is dance and the past tense of dance is danced.
The simple past tense is climbed.
The simple past and past participle are both 'had'.
The simple past and past participle are both brought.
The past tense is danced. Dance is a regular verb so the past is verb + ed