Lent.
The past perfect tense of "lend" is "had lent." This tense is used to indicate that an action was completed before another action in the past. For example, "She had lent him the book before he moved."
The past tense is borrowed.
lent It is not 'loaned', as the word 'loan' is actually a noun which has just been corrupted over time.
The future tense is will lend.
If your credit is good, a bank will lend you money. If your credit is bad, then only a very close personal friend, who is willing to take a risk, will lend you money.
The simple past tense of "lend" is "lent."
The simple past and past participle are both lent.
The second form of "lend" is "lent." In English, "lend" is the base form, while "lent" is the simple past and past participle form. For example, in a sentence: "I lent my book to a friend yesterday."
Both the past and the past participle are 'lent'.
The past participle of lend is "lent."
No, the past tense is lent.
The past tense of "lend" is "lent."
infinitive: lendpast: lentpast participle: lent
Lent is the past tense and past participle.
The past simple of "have" is "had."
The simple past is had.
Past simple and simple past are both the same thing. They are both the past tense of a verb.