I went to the Shantay town, i eat an apple, it was raining 50minutes ago
The past tense of "need" is "needed," and the past continuous tense is "was needing" or "were needing." For example, "I needed some help yesterday" (past tense) and "I was needing assistance when you arrived" (past continuous tense).
Some examples: Past tense - worked. Future tense - will work. Past tense - played. Future tense - will play. Past tense - lied. Future tense - will lie.
"Said" is not an example of past tense; it is the past participle of the verb "say." In past tense, it would be "said."
The past tense of "has" is "had." For example, "He has a car" changes to "He had a car."
No. The past tense version of have is had. Example: I had 2 dollars, but I spent it on gum.
My is not a verb. My is a pronoun. Therefore, there is no past tense of my.
The past tense of shed is shed. The past tense of burst is burst.
Swung is the past tense of swing, not swang, as some people believe.I swung on the swing.I have swung on the swing.
The past tense of get is got. For isn't a verb and so doesn't have a past tense. The past tense of has is had. Had is already the past tense. The past tense of have is had.
The usual past tense for "sing" is "sang". Some also accept "sung", but this traditionally is only for the past participle.
No. Some verbs, especially the ones with an Anglo-Saxon origin, do not. Take "run", for example, whose past tense is "ran". "Go" and "went" is another example.
Yes, "could" is the past tense of "can." For example, "I can swim" changes to "I could swim" in the past tense.