You were very happy.
Depends on if you know me or not. Am I a happy person?
Swoll is slang word that is used as an adjective meaning very muscular. It is not a verb, so it has no past tense.
That depends on the verb. In English we have regular verbs, which take an -ed at the end, and irregular verbs, which do whatever they want.I will use convert for my first example.Convert is a regular verb. The simple past tense is converted.Lie is an irregular verb (what you do in bed, or what you tell your dog to do).The simple past tense of lie is lay. The past participle of lie is lain.Verbs are very confusing and very tricky little words.
You can simply say thank you in the past tense, such as: Thank you for your letter dated... I am very grateful for your help on . . . , thank you. Please accept my belated thank you (explain why its late)
she knew him very well....
Depends on if you know me or not. Am I a happy person?
It is already in past tense, because it has the word built, which is in past tense. In present tense, it's, "You are building the boat very quickly."
i do not think there is a past tense of "neat"...."your room is very neat" (present tense) and "her room was very neat" (past tense)...same word.
The word 'thought' is a verb. It is the past tense form of the verb 'to think'.Example sentences:# I think that nurses ought to have more pay. (present tense) # I thought it was a very good film. (past tense)
Swoll is slang word that is used as an adjective meaning very muscular. It is not a verb, so it has no past tense.
That depends on the verb. In English we have regular verbs, which take an -ed at the end, and irregular verbs, which do whatever they want.I will use convert for my first example.Convert is a regular verb. The simple past tense is converted.Lie is an irregular verb (what you do in bed, or what you tell your dog to do).The simple past tense of lie is lay. The past participle of lie is lain.Verbs are very confusing and very tricky little words.
"It was very cold on the mountains."
You were very happy yesterday
were is a past tense plural be verb. They were very unhappy
I am very sure the past of teach is taught.
You can simply say thank you in the past tense, such as: Thank you for your letter dated... I am very grateful for your help on . . . , thank you. Please accept my belated thank you (explain why its late)
The past form is 'was', as in "I was very happy."