It's important that we have completed the report before the meeting tomorrow.
In this sentence, "we have completed" should be changed to "we complete" to ensure the verb tense is consistent.
The verb in the sentence is in present tense.
The grammatical error in this sentence is the tense inconsistency. The verb "followed" should be in the past perfect tense to match the conditional verb "would not have fought." The corrected sentence would be "He would not have fought them if they had followed his advice."
The tense of the verb "clean" in the sentence is future tense, indicated by the auxiliary verb "will."
The verb tense is correct in the sentence: "She will be running in the race next weekend."
The Past Simple Tense in the Passive Voice (of the verb TO SET).
The verb in the sentence is in present tense.
The grammatical error in this sentence is the tense inconsistency. The verb "followed" should be in the past perfect tense to match the conditional verb "would not have fought." The corrected sentence would be "He would not have fought them if they had followed his advice."
The tense of the verb "clean" in the sentence is future tense, indicated by the auxiliary verb "will."
There is no future tense verb in this sentence. The sentence is present simple (is).
The verb tense is correct in the sentence: "She will be running in the race next weekend."
I don't think 'error' can be a verb. The verb form is err(pt. erred ; pp.erred).
The Past Simple Tense in the Passive Voice (of the verb TO SET).
The verb laughed is past. The sentence is past simple.
The verb tense is wrong. You have to say, he suggested leaving at ten o'clock. Since the verb leave is being used as the object of the verb suggest, you need the gerund tense. Which is to say, the verb is acting as a noun.
In this sentence, 'attend' is used in the future tense.
The future tense verb for the sentence "The outline is ready" would be "will be." So the future tense sentence would be "The outline will be ready."
Simple future