The simple present tense of "to be" is an irregular conjugation:
I am, we are
You are
He, she or it is, they are
In the simple present tense, the verb "to be" is conjugated as follows:
There are two simple tenses. Present simple and past simple. The word simple means one verb ie not a verb phrase.Present simple has one verb in a present tense form eg They walk to school. -- walk is the present tense verb.Past simple has one verb in a past tense form eg We walked to school. -- walked is the past tense verb.
The correct verb tense for "isn't" is present tense (or simple present). It is a contraction of "is not." For example, "He isn't going to the party."
HAVE or HAS is the simple present tense of the verb "to have" I have you have (singular) he, she or it has we have you have (plural) they have Examples are: I have a wife and two children. They have lots of money. Note "will have" is the future tense and "had" is the past tense.
"Have" can be in various verb tenses based on the context, such as present simple (have), present continuous (having), past simple (had), past continuous (was/were having), present perfect (have had), and past perfect (had had).
This is past tense. Although the verb give is in the present form the tense is shown by the auxiliary verb do, which is in the past - did.
There are two simple tenses. Present simple and past simple. The word simple means one verb ie not a verb phrase.Present simple has one verb in a present tense form eg They walk to school. -- walk is the present tense verb.Past simple has one verb in a past tense form eg We walked to school. -- walked is the past tense verb.
Verb do not
The present simple tense of the verb "provide" is "provides" for he/she/it and "provide" for all other subjects. For example, "He provides us with excellent service" or "They provide valuable feedback."
It is simple present tense.
The correct verb tense for "isn't" is present tense (or simple present). It is a contraction of "is not." For example, "He isn't going to the party."
The verb - is - is a present tense be verb so the tense of this sentence is present. Also because there is only one verb you could say it is present simple.
HAVE or HAS is the simple present tense of the verb "to have" I have you have (singular) he, she or it has we have you have (plural) they have Examples are: I have a wife and two children. They have lots of money. Note "will have" is the future tense and "had" is the past tense.
You is a pronoun and pronouns don't show tense. Verbs show tense. You walk to school. - present simple, verb walk You walked to school - past simple, verb walked = past tense of walk.
Yes it is.
Yes when people refer to the "present tense" they often mean the "simple present tense". The other present tenses are normally referred to as such. For example, the "present perfect tense".Also:It is called present simple or simple present because it has one verb.
There is no future tense verb in this sentence. The sentence is present simple (is).
Simple past tense - announced Simple present tense - announce/announces Simple future tense - will announce