You can't be serious. Bill Gates.
Would is a past tense form of will. Were is a second person singular past indicative of be.
No, writing in third person does not require the use of past tense; you can use any tense that suits your narrative. Third person can be written in past, present, or future tense, depending on the story you want to tell. The key is to maintain consistency in the chosen tense throughout the piece.
Depends on what the case is about.
YOU are the only person who can answer these personal questions about what is going on in your mind. WikiAnswers will not read your mind and answer this for you.
The past tense is wrote; the future tense is will write.
Formal writing does not use contractions, but it has no rule against first person pronouns, beyond making sure you never use "myself" as a substitute for "me."
To share an example from your past where you overcame something as inspiration to others without it being used against you, you can write it in third person, as if you were only a witnesss to the act.
how do you feel about writing academic paper? if you have enjoyed writing in the past, what did you like about the process of writing? if you have not enjoyed it why not
was writing
Writing books. She is always writing as her favorite past time.
Writing books. She is always writing as her favorite past time.
Your question is not clear. The tense for the word 'writing' ? The word writing, if it is a verb, is called the present participle. To be past or present it must be with a word like am/is/are or was/were. was writing - past continuous is writing = present continuous But writing can also be a noun and nouns don't show tenses: His writing is very good.