Pronouns don't change based on tense in French - only number, person and gender.
"Your" is a possessive pronoun. Pronouns don't have tense, only verbs have tenses. * The past tense of "you're" (you are) is "you were."
No have & has are present. I have/He has. Past is had.
"you" is a pronoun. Pronouns do not have past tense: only verbs do.
Begin IS the present tense, began is the past tense, and begun is the past participle.
The present tense for the verb "have" is "have" for the pronouns I, you, we, and they, and "has" for the pronouns he, she, and it.
"Your" is a possessive pronoun. Pronouns don't have tense, only verbs have tenses. * The past tense of "you're" (you are) is "you were."
No have & has are present. I have/He has. Past is had.
"you" is a pronoun. Pronouns do not have past tense: only verbs do.
Begin IS the present tense, began is the past tense, and begun is the past participle.
The present tense for the verb "have" is "have" for the pronouns I, you, we, and they, and "has" for the pronouns he, she, and it.
When using "have" or "has" in combination with the past participle, you are creating present perfect tense. "Have" is used with plural pronouns (I, you, we, they), and "has" with singular pronouns (he, she, it). This construction indicates actions that started in the past and continue into the present or are relevant to the present.
No, "were" is not an action verb. It is a form of the verb "to be," used in the past tense for the subject pronouns "you," "we," "they," and "I."
You is a pronoun and pronouns don't show tense. Verbs show tense. You walk to school. - present simple, verb walk You walked to school - past simple, verb walked = past tense of walk.
Did is usually used in past tense sentences, while does is used in present tense.Also do is used as simple present , for the pronouns I, we , you , they , anddoes is used as simple present , for the pronouns he, she , it.Furthermore do is for plural, does for singular, and did is for both plural and singular.
"Some" is not a verb- the concept of tense does not apply. The past tense of sum is summed, if that is what you meant.
The past tense is 'some books were on sale'.
The past tense of "need" is "needed," and the past continuous tense is "was needing" or "were needing." For example, "I needed some help yesterday" (past tense) and "I was needing assistance when you arrived" (past continuous tense).