The past of eat is ate.
Future tenses for eat are:
will eat -- I will eat my lunch soon
am/is/are going to eat -- We are going to eat later.
am/is/are eating -- I am eating my lunch after the movie.
To change a verb into future tense, you generally add "will" before the base form of the verb. For example, "I eat" becomes "I will eat" in the future tense.
Yes. "Will eat" is a verb phrase, qualifying it as a verb in the future tense.
The past tense is ate.(Be careful - eat is an irregular verb which means the past participle is different. The past participle is eaten)The present tense is:I/You/We/They eat.He/She/It eats.The present participle is eating.The future tense is will eat.
The future tense of the verb 'drip' is will drip.
The future tense of the verb "to be" is "will be." For example, "I will be happy."
To make a verb future tense in English, you typically use the auxiliary verb "will" followed by the base form of the main verb. For example, "to eat" becomes "will eat." Alternatively, you can use "be going to" for future intentions, as in "I am going to eat." These structures indicate actions that will take place after the present moment.
will + verb is future tenseThe rapture will occur in the future.We will go to the beach tomorrow.The dog will eat his food when we have gone.
Simple future
A future tense verb expresses an action that will occur in the future. In English, future tense verbs are typically formed by adding "will" or "shall" before the base verb (e.g. "will go", "shall eat").
The future tense of the verb 'are' is will be.The future tense of the auxiliary verb 'are' is will(will go, will see, will study, etc.)
"will" is the helping verb in the sentence "Nick will eat spaghetti for dinner." Will creates the future tense of eat.
The tense of the verb "clean" in the sentence is future tense, indicated by the auxiliary verb "will."