The future tense of hunt is will hunt.
The past tense is "hunted"
Were is a past tense form of be. The future tense of be is will be.
Am, is, and are are present tense forms of be. The past tense forms of be are was and were. The future tense of be is will be.
The future tense is will carry.
I'm assuming you mean "to rake" and not just rake, the noun. If so, then the past tense would be "raked." The future tense would be "will rake."
There are two past tense of ''to hunt'' is to haunt
Relax(present)(future) Relaxed(past)
The present tense of "hunted" is "hunt." In the present tense, it can be used as "I hunt," "you hunt," "he/she/it hunts," "we hunt," and "they hunt," depending on the subject.
Hunt is present tense. Hunted is past tense.
The past tense is "hunted"
Were is a past tense form of be. The future tense of be is will be.
Am, is, and are are present tense forms of be. The past tense forms of be are was and were. The future tense of be is will be.
The future tense is will carry.
That is the correct spelling of the tense "future continuous." The tense is formed from the present participle (-ing) form of the verb, preceded by the helper verbs "will be" or "shall be." Example: (to leave) he will be leaving / is he going to be leaving?
I'm assuming you mean "to rake" and not just rake, the noun. If so, then the past tense would be "raked." The future tense would be "will rake."
The future tense of "was" is "will be."
The future tense of "seek" is "will seek." The future tense of "bring" is "will bring."