Studies is present tense. It's the third person singular conjugation of study.
"He studies" in the sentence "He studies English in the school" is present tense. "He has studied" is past tense. "He will study" is future tense.
The present tense of "study" is "studies" for third person singular (he/she/it) and "study" for all other persons (I/you/we/they).
The verb tense of "geology" is present tense. For example, "She studies geology at the university."
The present tense of "Henry study hard at school" is "Henry studies hard at school."
Yes. estudia is the conjugated form of the verb estudiar, in the present tense, third person, singular. estudia is "He studies" or "She studies" or "It studies". estudiar is the infinitive form of the verb (to) study.
The simple present tense of study is study/studies.I studyWe studyYou studyHe/She/It studiesThey study
were (a form of the verb "to be," past tense plural)
Yes because you are doing something right.
You use "s" with verbs in the simple present tense when the subject is he, she, or it. For example, "He eats," "She studies," "It runs."
The word study is a verb. The past tense is studied. It can also be a noun. For example, a room used for studying.
"Read" has the same spelling for present and past tense due to its history as an irregular verb in the English language. The pronunciation changes to "red" in the past tense to indicate the shift in time, while the spelling remains consistent.
Am, is, and are are present tense forms of be. The past tense forms of be are was and were. The future tense of be is will be.