Becoming is the present participle.
am / are becoming. It takes an auxiliary ( helper ) verb in the present.
Yes, "were" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "to be."
It is present tense.
The word "ran" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "run."
The word synchronized is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb synchronize.
The verb 'is' is the present singular tense of the word are. She is going to the store. The verb 'are' is the present plural tense of the word is. They are going shopping. Note: Both is and are are known of the Present Tense Verb "To Be"
The word "had" is a past tense verb.
No, the word "was" is the past tense of the verb "is." The present tense equivalent of "was" is "is."
"Thought" is the past tense verb of the word, "Think". Therefore, there is no past tense of the word "Thought".
Yes, was is a verb ; the simple past tense of is.
The word that changes a past tense verb into present tense is called an auxiliary verb. For example, "is" is an auxiliary verb used with the past tense verb "walked" to form the present tense "is walking."
Discriminated is a past tense verb. It can also be a Participle: He was discriminated (here used to form the Passive Voice). When it precedes a noun, it becomes an Attribute (becoming similar to an adjective).