Let will still be let in past tense.
Let does not change from present tense to past tense. Let is also the past participle.
You can leave the word unchanged. For example - Future tense: "I will let you borrow my car." Past tense: "In the past, I have let you borrow my car but I will never do that again."
The past tense of let is let. "Let" is one of the so-called "invariant" verbs: its present, past, and past participle are all "let". However, it is not literally invariant, because its third person singular present tense form is "lets" (note lack of apostrophe!).
Let is an irregular verb so you don't add -ed to make the past tense.Let is the same for past tense and past participle.let / let / letI just let my dog out.I let my dog out yesterday.I have let my dog out again.
The present perfect tense of let is: have/has let
Let does not change from present tense to past tense. Let is also the past participle.
The past perfect tense of let is had let.
The past is let.
You can leave the word unchanged. For example - Future tense: "I will let you borrow my car." Past tense: "In the past, I have let you borrow my car but I will never do that again."
The past tense of let is let. "Let" is one of the so-called "invariant" verbs: its present, past, and past participle are all "let". However, it is not literally invariant, because its third person singular present tense form is "lets" (note lack of apostrophe!).
Let is an irregular verb so you don't add -ed to make the past tense.Let is the same for past tense and past participle.let / let / letI just let my dog out.I let my dog out yesterday.I have let my dog out again.
The present perfect tense of let is: have/has let
let us gone If "let go" means "release" me or "drop it", it's "let go". (Only "let" is a Past Tense, as "go" is a short infinitive, therefore - it stays the same).
let
The past participle is let. The simple past tense is letted.
Drop is not the past tense of drip. Both drop and drip are present tense verbs. The past tense of drop is dropped, and the past tense of drip is dripped.
For a regular verb let's use "answer". Present: answer, Past: answered, Past Participle: answered. For an irregular verb let's use "run". Present: run, Past: ran, PP: run.