Past, as shown by the auxiliary DID.
Set could be past or present because the present, past and past participle are all the same egset / set / set
"is' is present tense. For past tense use was or were.
It is an adverb, not a verb,; it can accompany a Present, a Past, a Present Perfect, a Past Perfect and a Future verb.
past
Had is past tense.
It's present Ex (Present): My grandoarents are here. Ex (Past): My grandparents were here.
call
archeologist
a flashback
call died dead
rem·i·nisceˌreməˈnis/verbverb: reminisce; 3rd person present: reminisces; past tense: reminisced; past participle: reminisced; gerund or present participle: reminiscingindulge in enjoyable recollection of past events.Booty Call- Meet for sex without strings attached
there are a lot but here are three: was, is, will be
He's having sex with an image in his mind which comes from past desires. He's not in the present and not with the real you. Look at if you are in the here-and-now yourself when you have sex with him. If you are, it will call him there.
the difference is that the are two different meanings and the here is present tense andthere is past tense.
Have is present tense. The past tense is had.
There is a past, present, and future. There was a past; there is a present and there will be a future.
Either use is correct, but they can have different meanings. The form "here I found" is past tense. It does not indicate whether the situation existed solely in the past or continues into the present. In this case, it could have occurred long ago and then ended. The form "here I have found" has the implication that although the situation may have begun in the past, it continues to the present time. This is the present perfect tense used as a continuing activity.