The past tense.
It depends on the tense. If it is future tense of it is something that is going to or should happen, then it would be A. If it was present tense (self-explanatory) then it would be B. If it was past tense or something that already happened, then it would be C or D.
Yes it is but it is usually used in a phrase not just by itself. For example, you would say "will be going" or "going to." Going can be used as a future tense by itslef though.
He would not be going to a summer home, he'd have to walk dogs to earn money.
you would be a blob and there would be nothing that you could do except tense the muscle to move.
it would dry out
The future tense for "carry" would be like "carrying"like if you say I'm going too be carrying a package.. isn't that future tense?!?There is also "carry" itself, like in the sentence 'I am going to carry the package'
No. Had the government known what was going to happen, the government would have prevented it from happening.
Do you even care refers to somethin that has already happened or is about to happen: past and present tense. Would you care refers to before something has happened: future tense
Your ice cream would melt.
The past participle (and simple past) is willed.The word will is used specifically to indicate something that is going to happen in the future; it has no applicability to the past, and has no past tense. I will go to the store, in the future. I did go to the store, in the past. This is correct for the auxiliary verb will. However, it ignores the (posibly obsolete) use of "will" as an ordinary verb, meaning "wish". In that usage, there is a past tense form, "would".
The past participle (and simple past) is willed.The word will is used specifically to indicate something that is going to happen in the future; it has no applicability to the past, and has no past tense. I will go to the store, in the future. I did go to the store, in the past. This is correct for the auxiliary verb will. However, it ignores the (posibly obsolete) use of "will" as an ordinary verb, meaning "wish". In that usage, there is a past tense form, "would".
The word "would" is predominantly used as a past tense form of "will" to indicate future-in-the-past events or hypothetical situations. It can also be used in conditional statements to express a future possibility or intention.