I am grinding the coffee. (present tense)
I ground the coffee. (past tense)
I will grind more coffee. (future tense)
The three tenses of "grind" are:
The past tense of grind is ground.
The irregular past tense form of "grind" is "ground".
A homograph for "ground" is a flat area of land or the past tense and past participle of the verb "to grind."
No, the sentence "By that time he will have been gone for three days" is in future perfect continuous tense.
The present tense for "have" is "has" when referring to the third person singular (he, she, it), and "have" for all other subjects (I, you, we, they).
The past tense of grind is ground.
The past tense of grind is ground.
The irregular past tense form of "grind" is "ground".
The present tense of Ground is Grind.
The present tense of ground is grind.
to grind
Had ground.
The past tense and past participle are both ground.
ground As in "I ground that coffee last night."
It depends on the context. 'Ground' is already past tense. It is the past tense of 'grind'. On the other hand, you can be 'grounded' for staying out past your curfew.
Three is a number. It has no past tense, it is always three.
There is no verb in "in three days", so there is no tense.