You are is used in the present tense.
The word "you are" is used in the present tense. "You were" is used in the past tense.
No, the word "hasn't" is a contraction of "has not" and is used in the present perfect tense.
The word "were" is the past tense of the verb "are," which is used to describe something that is in the present tense.
The word "do" is used in both present and past tenses. In present tense, it is used as an auxiliary verb to form questions and negatives (e.g. Do you like coffee? I do not know). In past tense, it can be used as the past tense of "do" (e.g. He did his homework).
The present tense of the word "ashamed" is "ashame."
"Has" is in present tense. The past tense is "had".
No, the word "hasn't" is a contraction of "has not" and is used in the present perfect tense.
The word "were" is the past tense of the verb "are," which is used to describe something that is in the present tense.
The word "do" is used in both present and past tenses. In present tense, it is used as an auxiliary verb to form questions and negatives (e.g. Do you like coffee? I do not know). In past tense, it can be used as the past tense of "do" (e.g. He did his homework).
The present tense of the word "ashamed" is "ashame."
"Has" is in present tense. The past tense is "had".
The word "harvest" can be used in present or future tense. Examples include "We are harvesting apples today" (present tense) and "We will harvest the crops next month" (future tense).
The simple present tense is do.
The verb 'were' is the simple past tense used with a plural subject.The present tense used with a plural subject is are.Example: They were a mess but they are clean now.
No, the word "now" refers to the present moment, so it cannot be used in the future tense.
The word "takes" is the present tense form of the verb "take."
It's present tense but this word is rarely, if ever, used in present day English.
Yes. "Game" is more frequently used as a noun or adjective, but as a verb, that is the present tense.