It's the present perfect tense.
"Had finished" is the past perfect tense.
Finished is the past tense of finish.
had finished
To make the past perfect tense: Subject + Had + Past Participle For example: I had finished my homework.
The past perfect tense is used to indicate that an action was completed before another action took place in the past. For example, in the sentence "She had finished her homework before the movie started," the phrase "had finished" is in the past perfect tense, showing that the homework was completed prior to the movie beginning.
"Had finished" is the past perfect tense.
The present tense of finished is:I/You/We/They finish.He/She/It finishes.The present participle is finishing.
Finished is the past tense of finish.
The past tense of finish is finished. The past tense of be is was/were.
The past tense of "finish" is "finished."
The present perfect tense of "finish" is "have finished" or "has finished," depending on the subject of the sentence.
Yes "finished" is a past tense verb as it is an action word.
Yes, a sentence can contain both past tense and future tense verbs. For example, "She will have finished the project by the deadline." In this sentence, "will have finished" is future tense and "by the deadline" indicates a future event from the perspective of the past tense "finished."
Finished.
It's in the present perfect tense.
To form the present perfect tense you follow this structure:Subject + Have/Has + Past Participle.Which becomes:I have finished my paper. I finished it a few minutes ago.
had finished