Past tense.
Future perfect tense.
Present perfect tense - have/has gone. Present perfect continuous tense - have/has been going. Past perfect tense - had gone. Past perfect continuous tense - had been going. Future perfect tense - will have gone. Future perfect continuous tense - will have been going.
It depends on how it is being used, but the past tense of the verb "to be" would be "been", and the plural form could be either "has been", "were", "was", or "have been".
The past tense of "differ" would be "differed".
There's not exactly a past tense for it. You would say it as 'was real', 'had been real', 'used to be real', etc.
no. the word WOULD is the past tense of will...
"Would have been" is used to talk about hypothetical situations or events that did not happen in the past. It is used to describe unrealized possibilities or regrets about the past. It is not used to refer to events in the future.
The future tense of "have been" is "will have been."
The future perfect tense of be is will have been.
The future perfect tense of be is will have been.
you could use it in the future tense e.g i will be getting a hamster on saturday. for the past tense you would use been. for the present you could use something like doing
The future tense of "to have" is "will have." For example, "I will have dinner tonight."
Future perfect tense.
"Will have been completed" is in the future perfect tense, indicating an action that will be completed at a specific point in the future.
The future perfect progressive tense of repaired is will have been repairing.
Past tense - shared. Present tense - I/you/we/they share. He/she/it shares. Future tense - will share. Past perfect tense - had shared. Present perfect tense - I/you/we/they have shared. He/she/it has shared. Future perfect tense - will/shall have shared. Past perfect continuous tense - had been sharing. Present perfect continuous - I/you/we/they have been sharing. He/she/it has been sharing. Future perfect continuous - will have been sharing.
Answer"Will have been" is the initial structure of the future perfect continuous tense. (See the second answer for its other usage)AnswerNo, it isn't; it's the Future Perfect of the verb TO BE. "Will have been GOING", for instance, is the Present Perfect Continuous of the verb TO GO. Answer"Will have been going" is the future perfect continuous tense. This tense follows this structure: Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Will" + Auxiliary Verb "Have" + Auxiliary Verb "Be" (Been) + Present ParticipleThe present perfect continuous tense follows this structure:Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Have" or "Has" + Auxiliary Verb "Be" (Been) + Present Participle.Thus: the present perfect continuous tense would be "have been going" without the auxiliary verb "will".See the related links for more information.