Stand to attention
I am standing to attention
stand here
"Stand" becomes "stands" in the present tense for third person singular (he/she/it).
The present tense of "stand" is "stands" for third person singular (he, she, it) and "stand" for all other pronouns (I, you, we, they).
"Stand" can be used in both present and past tense. In the present tense, it is used with a base form of the verb (e.g. stand, stands). In the past tense, it is used with "stood" (e.g. stood).
it is standing---The present perfect tense of "stand":I have stoodYou have stoodHe/she/it has stoodWe have stoodThey have stoodIs standing is the third person singular in the present continuous.
Standing is not past tense. It is the present participle of the verb "stand". Present participles require the use of auxiliary verbs to show tense. Examples: was/were standing (past progressive) am/is/are standing (present progressive) will be standing (future progressive) Stood is the past tense of stand.
The word "standing" can be present tense (e.g. "I am standing") or past tense (e.g. "I was standing").
The present tense of "stand" is "stands" for third person singular (he, she, it) and "stand" for all other pronouns (I, you, we, they).
"Stand" would be in the present tense. "Stood" would be the past. Example - Present: She must stand by the gate, Past: She stood by the gate.
The future tense of stand is "will stand."
"Stand" can be used in both present and past tense. In the present tense, it is used with a base form of the verb (e.g. stand, stands). In the past tense, it is used with "stood" (e.g. stood).
The past tense of stand is stood. Ran is already in the past tense. The present tense is run.
The word "standing" can be present tense (e.g. "I am standing") or past tense (e.g. "I was standing").
it is standing---The present perfect tense of "stand":I have stoodYou have stoodHe/she/it has stoodWe have stoodThey have stoodIs standing is the third person singular in the present continuous.
Standing is not past tense. It is the present participle of the verb "stand". Present participles require the use of auxiliary verbs to show tense. Examples: was/were standing (past progressive) am/is/are standing (present progressive) will be standing (future progressive) Stood is the past tense of stand.
The word stands is a present tense verb. It is also the plural noun of stand.
Present tense is used to describe things that are happening now or are generally true. Past tense is used to describe things that have already happened.
The verb is is the present tense.
Present perfect tense.