The present tense.
No. The word have is a verb, or a helper verb to form perfect tenses.
"Baronial" is an adjective, not a verb. It therefore doesn't have tenses.
No, the word 'neither' isn't a verb so doesn't have any tenses. Only verbs have tenses.
The verb 'ring' has the following tenses: Present: ring/rings Past: rang Past Participle: rung
The sentence "I will go to the store yesterday to buy groceries" has mixed verb tenses and is incorrect.
Due is not a verb and does not have tenses.
Yes, the word 'do' is a verb. The present tenses are 'do' and 'does'. The past tense is 'did' whilst the past participle is 'done'.
A verb is also known as an action word, and there are past, present, and future tenses.
Yes, the word 'do' is a verb. The present tenses are 'do' and 'does'. The past tense is 'did' whilst the past participle is 'done'.
The word recent is not a verb and so doesn't have tenses.
The word be is a verb. It is an irregular verb.
Science is a noun. Word tenses apply to the verb.