The past tense of sentence is "sentenced".
Past-tense. Solid wording.
No. As 'you' refers to either second person singular or plural noun, it takes a plural verb of 'to be'. As you want to refer to the past tense in your sentence, the plural verb of 'to be' in the past tense is 'were'. The correct sentence should be like this: You were not there.
Since the action is in the PAST, you have to use "exited" which is the past tense of the verb.
The past tense of correct is corrected.
Yes, it is correct to use the past tense after "would you mind if" in a sentence. For example, "Would you mind if I borrowed your book yesterday?" is a grammatically correct sentence.
What was the past tense for this sentence.
The correct past tense of "put" is "put."
No, it is not the correct sentence. Beacuse the form of the word "expect" was used in past tense (expected), you would have to make the verb (will) in past tence. The correct sentence is : You had always expected I would do this.
The correct past tense would be "you were".
The past tense of "correct" is "corrected," and the past participle is also "corrected."
It's a past tense sentence. Built is the past tense of build.