is used = the Present Tense of the Indicative Mood in the Passive Voice
The word "is" is followed by a past tense verb when forming the past continuous tense, such as "He was eating," where "was" is the past tense of "is" and "eating" is the past participle of "eat" used in the continuous form.
The past perfect tense is used to show that an action was completed in the past before another past action or time. It is formed by using "had" followed by the past participle of the verb.
Yes, "did you" is the past tense form of the verb "do". It is used to form yes/no questions and is often followed by the base form of the main verb.
It depends on how it is being used, but the past tense of the verb "to be" would be "been", and the plural form could be either "has been", "were", "was", or "have been".
When the verb "to be" is followed by another verb in the past tense, it creates the past continuous tense. This tense is used to describe an action that was ongoing in the past at a specific point in time.
'spat' is correct, but you will find 'spit' also being used.
No. If it is being used as a verb, "back" is the present tense. The past tense would be backed.
The past tense of "wheel" (being used as a verb, not a noun) is "wheeled".
The past tense is used when something that has already happened (i.e. in the past) is being talked about.
Prepared is a past tense already, but if it's being used as an adjective, then it is was prepared.
Condensate is primarily used as a noun. If it's being used as a verb the past tense is condensated.
The past tense of the verb "may" (as in will be allowed to do so) would be "can" or "could", depending on how it is being used.
It depends on how it is being used, but the past tense of the verb "to be" would be "been", and the plural form could be either "has been", "were", "was", or "have been".
When the verb "to be" is followed by another verb in the past tense, it creates the past continuous tense. This tense is used to describe an action that was ongoing in the past at a specific point in time.
The past tense of "ring" when referring to a bell or doorbell is "rang." For the act of making a phone call, the past tense is "called," not "rung."
'spat' is correct, but you will find 'spit' also being used.
The tense used after "wish" depends on the context and the desired meaning. When expressing a present or future unreal situation, "wish" is followed by a past simple tense. For example: "I wish I had studied more." However, when expressing a past unreal situation, "wish" is followed by a past perfect tense. For example: "I wish I had gone to the party last night."
"Had used" is the past perfect tense.