Replace the present tense form of the verb by the verb phrase "will [or shall] + [infinitive form of the verb]".
There is no future tense verb in this sentence. The sentence is present simple (is).
Present continuos tense: am/is/are excelling Present perfect continuous: have/has been excelling Past continuous tense: was /were excelling Past perfect continuous: had been excelling Future continuous tense: will be excelling Future perfect continuous: will have been excelling
stidiedhas studied because this leaves a sense of present tense where as will study is future tense and had studied is past tense and to put stuied is a simlpe form of the past tense.
The future tense is will rearrange.
Will raise is the future tense of raise.
Here's three examples: Present tense, I drive my son to school; Past tense, I drove my son to school;and Future tense, I will drive my son to school.
There is no future tense verb in this sentence. The sentence is present simple (is).
The two verbs are: will do = future watches = present simple
Present tense.
The form of the verb provides this information, although sometimes it needs to be clarified. There are some verbs (such as read) that use the same spelling for the present tense and the past tense. Example: He runs is the present tense. (He is running) He ran is the past tense. (He was running) He will run is the future tense. (He will be running)
the will in your sentence is present tense, so it is present tense
You convert a sentence in the present tense to a sentence in the past tense by simply changing the verb form to the past tense. You converted a sentence in the present tense to a sentence in the past tense by simply changing the verb form to the past tense.
The word "miss" can be in the present tense, past tense, or future tense depending on the context of the sentence. For example, "I miss you" is present tense, "I missed you" is past tense, and "I will miss you" is future tense.
The word "teach" can be present tense, past tense, or future tense depending on how it is used in a sentence. For example, "teach" is present tense in "I teach English," past tense in "I taught English last semester," and future tense in "I will teach English next year."
Are is a present tense verb so "whales are mammals." is a present tense sentence.
'Applied' is the past tense of the verb 'apply' The present tense would be: I/you/we/they apply. He/she/it applies. The future tense would be: Will apply.
i have lost your love