The present tense of "reply" is simply "reply" itself, unless the subject of the verb in the third person singular. In that instance, the verb is "replies".
The present perfect tense of "reply" is "have replied" or "has replied." This tense is formed by using the auxiliary verb "have" or "has" followed by the past participle form of the verb, in this case "replied."
The past tense of reply is replied.
There is no present tense form of the verb "laugh" that includes a past participle of "laugh" except in a strained passive voice construction such as, "His reply was loudly laughed".
The past tense of "reply" is "replied."
The verb is is the present tense.
The present perfect tense of "reply" is "have replied" or "has replied." This tense is formed by using the auxiliary verb "have" or "has" followed by the past participle form of the verb, in this case "replied."
The past tense of reply is replied.
There is no present tense form of the verb "laugh" that includes a past participle of "laugh" except in a strained passive voice construction such as, "His reply was loudly laughed".
The past tense of "reply" is "replied."
Reply is the correct form of the verb reply (replies for third person singular). Replied is the past tense and past participle, and replying is the present participle.
The future tense of reply is will reply.Alsopresent continuous with a time phrase:I am replying to his request tomorrow.be + going to + verb:I am going to reply to his request tomorrow.
The plural of the noun reply is replies.The present tense, third-person singular of the verb is also replies.
The verb is is the present tense.
The past tense of did is did. The present tense of did is do. The future tense of did is will do.
It was, (past tense) it is, (present tense) it will be( future tense)
Past tense I had Present tense I have Future Tense I will have
Yes, I can. There you go! :-) But not if the question is in the past tense or in the future tense. Of course, if someone asks: "Did Maria go to the movies yesterday?" It would be OK to reply: "Definitely! She goes to the movies every day!" But to be in the safe side, when you answer a question, you stick to the verb tense in the question itself.