"Their family camps during the summer" is present tense.
The verb is - will + base verb.This is 'will' future.
The past tense.
Your question should really be stated in the past tense, since the Nazi death camps were closed in 1945. In those camps, people were imprisoned, abused, starved, and killed.
It can be used as present and future:I/you/we/they camp. He/she/it camps. (present)Will camp. (future)The past tense would be 'camped'.
No, will have been planned is the future perfect tense.
In present tense, you can write "We go camping every summer." This maintains the habitual aspect of the original statement while using the present tense form of the verb "to go."
No. "How were your family doing?" makes reference to their family in the past tense. This implies they are dead.The proper way to form that sentence is "How is your family doing?". This refers to their family in the present tense.
but holes
The word "during" is a preposition and so it doesn't have a past tense.Only verbs have a past tense.
There was a time when I felt a strong urge to scream, but I had to stay silent during a tense family argument.
I vacationed in Mexico this summer.
Relations with all these countries were tense.