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.
The future tense of "What will you do on Saturday?" is "What will you be doing on Saturday?"
Fined is a verb. It's the past tense of fine.
Only verbs have past tenses, and the word kind is an adjective, hence it has no past tense. He is kind, he was kind, it's the same word.
Present continuous tense.
Begin is the future tense. As in "this event will begin at 10am on Saturday". The past tense is began or begun, as in "it began three days ago".
you could use it in the future tense e.g i will be getting a hamster on saturday. for the past tense you would use been. for the present you could use something like doing
It is the present perfect tense.
Present tense
"Had written" is the past perfect tense.
Begin is the future tense. As in "this event will begin at 10am on Saturday". The past tense is began or begun, as in "it began three days ago".
The story "Saturday Climbing" contains situational irony, as the mother expects a tense conversation with her daughter during their climbing trip, but instead, they bond and communicate effectively. This outcome is unexpected and contrasts with the mother's initial worries, creating irony in the situation.
Drove is the irregular past tense of drive.