It is the past perfect tense.
The past perfect tense of hope is had hoped.
The past perfect tense of hope is:I had hoped.
There isn't a past tense for will, because it is future tense. However, if you want to talk about a point in the past when you were looking forward to an event in the future (relevant to that point in the past), you would use "would." Here's an example: From a point in the past: "John hoped that his wife would get him a new golf club set for his birthday." (In the past, John hoped that something would happen in his future, which is in the past NOW, when the sentence is uttered.) Just to compare: From the present: "My friend John is hoping that his wife will get him a new set of golf clubs for his birthday." There. Clear as mud. :) In other words would is the past form of will.
No, have is the present tense. The past tense is had.
Were is past tense.
The past perfect tense of hope is had hoped.
Present tense: hope Past tense: hoped Future tense: will hope
The present perfect tense of the verb hope is have or has hoped.
The past tense of hope is hoped.
I/you/we/they hope. He/she/it hopes. The present participle is hoping.
If you are referring to the past tense of the word hope, then it is spelled hoped. If you are referring to the past tense of the word hop, then it is hopped.
Hoped is a verb. It's the past tense of hope.
Past tense - hoped. Present tense - I/you/we/they hope. He/she/it hopes. The present participle is hoping. Future tense - will hope.
The past tense and past participle are both hoped.
Hoped Tried Learnt or Learned
Since 'hoped' is past tense, the correct rendition would be "You hoped that the speaker of your iPhone was just broken."
The past perfect tense of hope is:I had hoped.