Yes. Example - He could have jumped over the fence yesterday.
To is not a verb and does not have a past tense.
'Is' is present tense be verb so no.But you can use the past participle after is in a passive sentence.The milk is kept in the fridge.
Past - there is nothing like that to use grammatically, but the natural replacement is 'Was'. Future - will be.
Yes, you should use a past participle after the verb "have" to form the present perfect tense. For example: "I have eaten," "She has studied."
To form the simple past tense of a verb you need to make the verb past tense. For regular verbs, you add -ed to the end of the verb. Irregular verbs are different in that there is no pattern to forming their past tense form. You must learn their past tense.To form the complete simple past tense you should use this formula:Subject + Past Tense Verb.For example:I danced. (dance is a regular verb)I sang. (sing is an irregular verb)To form the simple future tense you should follow this formula:Subject + Will + VerbFor example:I will play.I will go.
I believe it to be true, as you "could" use it as "could have", have being the past tense helping verb.
"You are" is not a verb. "Are" is a verb, but it's present tense, and it can't be used "with past tense" because it's not past tense, it's present tense.
To is not a verb and does not have a past tense.
'Is' is present tense be verb so no.But you can use the past participle after is in a passive sentence.The milk is kept in the fridge.
No, a thesaurus is used to find synonyms and antonyms of words, not to determine the past tense of a verb. To find the past tense of a verb, you can consult a verb conjugation chart or a grammar resource.
You can use it as a past tense verb, for example, you could say 'She was beginning to write her book.' or you could say 'She began to sing.' or 'I am beginning to understand.'
Past indefinite tense
Past - there is nothing like that to use grammatically, but the natural replacement is 'Was'. Future - will be.
Yes you could, but you would be using it in error. In English, people speak and write in error all the time. Dealt is the correct form of the past tense of the verb to deal.
No.The past tense of grow is grew.
Yes, you should use a past participle after the verb "have" to form the present perfect tense. For example: "I have eaten," "She has studied."
When you use the simple past tense or any tense which requires the past participle, you can see whether the verb is regular or irregular.Any verb that does not add -ed to the base form in the simple past and the participle is an irregular verb.