I/you/we/they dig. He/she/it digs.
The present participle is digging.
Past perfect tense - I had dug. Present perfect tense - I have dug. Future perfect tense - I will have dug.
Doug is a proper noun and does not have any tenses. If you meant the past tense verb dug, the present tense is dig.
The present tense of "Cynthia dug her heels into the sand" would be "Cynthia digs her heels into the sand."
Cynthia digs her heels into the sand.
The past tense of "dig" is "dug." For example, "Yesterday, I dug a hole in the garden."
Past perfect tense - I had dug. Present perfect tense - I have dug. Future perfect tense - I will have dug.
The verb dug is the past tense of to dig, and the present tense would be "digs."
Doug is a proper noun and does not have any tenses. If you meant the past tense verb dug, the present tense is dig.
"Dig" is the present tense and should be used to refer to a present action. "Dug" is the past tense and should be used to refer to an action that has already happened. "Have dug" is the present perfect tense and should be used to refer to an experience that happened in the past, to refer to a change that has taken place or to talk about a continuing situation that started in the past and is still happening now.
The present tense of "Cynthia dug her heels into the sand" would be "Cynthia digs her heels into the sand."
The lady sang a song as she dug the garden.digs is present simple.dig / dug / dug
Cynthia digs her heels into the sand.
Dug.A:Simple past tense: dug. She really dug that music.The past participle is the same as the past form:present perfect tense: dug. I've dug a well in my backyard.past perfect tense: had dug. He had dug himself down.The use of digged, while not entirely wrong, is now considered archaic.
The past tense of "dig" is "dug." For example, "Yesterday, I dug a hole in the garden."
The past tense of dig is dug. My dog dug up my garden just yesterday.
The simple past tense of "dig" is "dug".
"Had dug" is the past perfect tense of "dig".