future progressive.
The tense of the verb phrase "will be waiting" is future continuous tense. It indicates an action that will be ongoing in the future.
The phrase "had been waiting" is the past perfect continuous tense of the verb "to wait." It functions as a verb phrase in the sentence.
The phrase - is discussed - is a be verb (is) plus a past participle (discussed).That makes this a passive verb phrase, and because the be verb is present tense it is a present passive verbphrase.Money is discussed very lunch time.
"Was given" is a verb phrase that functions as the past tense of the verb "to give."
It could be:a be verb = am waiting, is kept.an auxiliary verb = have been waiting.a modal auxiliary verb = could have been waiting.
"Was believed" is a verb phrase made up of the past tense verb "was" and the past participle "believed." The main verb in the phrase is "believed," while "was" serves as an auxiliary verb indicating the past tense.
The phrase "had been waiting" is the past perfect continuous tense of the verb "to wait." It functions as a verb phrase in the sentence.
waiting.
The verb "had performed" is in the past perfect tense.
No, an adjective is a descriptive word which acts as a qualifier for a noun or noun phrase. "Waited" is the past tense of the verb "wait".
No. It's in the present tense.
Will release is future tense.
Will invest is future tense.
Made can be an action verb in past tense as long as it is in a verb phrase.
Replace the present tense form of the verb by the verb phrase "will [or shall] + [infinitive form of the verb]".
Yes. "Will eat" is a verb phrase, qualifying it as a verb in the future tense.
It's in the present perfect tense.
"Was given" is a verb phrase that functions as the past tense of the verb "to give."