"Nothing" is a pronoun, it doesn't have a past tense.
Hide is present tense, not past tense. The past tense is hid.
Hide is present tense, not past tense. The past tense is hid.
No, have is the present tense. The past tense is had.
Were is past tense.
Forgot is the past tense of forget. There is no past tense of forgot, forgot IS past tense.
The past tense is bled, and the past perfect tense is had bled.
Past - there is nothing like that to use grammatically, but the natural replacement is 'Was'. Future - will be.
nothing
Nothing
nothing, it stays the same, so you say i was angry or whatever
Felt is already the past tense of feel, so nothing. If you mean felt as in the proccess making wool into felt cloth, then it is "felted".
the past tense of am is was and the past tense of has is had
The past tense of "has" is "had" and the past tense of "have" is "had."
ventured: For example the common idiom, "...nothing ventured, nothing gained."
No, a positive noun is not a past tense verb. A positive noun refers to a person, place, thing, or idea, while a past tense verb indicates an action that has already occurred in the past. These are two different parts of speech with distinct functions in language.
Was and were are both the past tense of be. The present tense is: I am he is you are they are The past tense is: I was he was you were they were
"will be" is the future tense of "be". The past tense of "be" is "was/were".