The term 'birthday cake' is not a verb, it is a compound noun. Nouns do not have any tenses.
The past tense is: You bought cake.
Birthday is a noun, so it does not have a past tense.
The past tense of rely is "relied". Here is an example: "I relied on him to pick up our son's birthday cake on his way home."
Either "he had cut the cake", or "he cut the cake".
The past tense of have is had.What type of birthday party did you have?Oh, I had a small simple one.Do you have a notebook?Oh, I had a notebook.
The past tense is a verb tense that indicates something happened in the past.They ate the cake. - this sentence is past tense.The past participle is a word that is used to construct tenses such as present perfect, past perfect or passive.They have eaten the cake. (past participle is in bold)They had eaten the cake for breakfast.Bread is eaten at every meal
The past tense of can is used which is could.They could have given some cake to me.The negative form, can't is used with present perfect:They can't have eaten the whole cake!
the past tense of am is was and the past tense of has is had
In grammar simple means one verb. There are two tenses with one main verb -- past simple and present simple.Past simple -- I ate the cake. -- the verb ate is in past tense.Present simple -- I like cake. -- the verb like is in present tense.
The past tense of "has" is "had" and the past tense of "have" is "had."
'Memory' remains the same in both past, present and future tense. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Memory is a noun not a verb and nouns do not have tenses. The verb associated with memory is the verb "to remember" the past tense of this verb is "remembered" - "He remembered his last birthday". Alternatively one could say "he had a memory of his last birthday" which puts the memory into the past.
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