I/You/We/They run. He/She/It runs.
The past tense of "run" is "ran", and the present tense is "run".
Ran is the past tense.
"Run" is the present tense form of the verb, used when referring to something happening now or regularly. "Ran" is the past tense form of the verb, used when referring to something that happened in the past. For example, "I run every day" (present tense) and "Yesterday, I ran five miles" (past tense).
present first, then past run / ran walk / walked eat / ate listen / listened understand / understood argue / argued play / played record / recorded possess / possessed stamp / stamped
Here's three examples: Present tense, I drive my son to school; Past tense, I drove my son to school;and Future tense, I will drive my son to school.
The past tense of "run" is "ran", and the present tense is "run".
Ran is the past tense.
past tense
The past tense of ran is ran. The future is run. The present is running. Had Run, had ran.
The past tense of stand is stood. Ran is already in the past tense. The present tense is run.
"Will be run": the verb "run" is its own past participle.
ran
Past
Change the past tense form of the verb to the present tense. For example. "I ran" becomes "I run"
That depends. "Ran out" is past tense, and "run out" is present tense. Yesterday, I ran out of sugar. I hope I don't run out of sugar.
Ran is the past tense of run. Running is the present participle.
Past tense - ran (simple) & run (past participle) Present tense - run/runs/running. Future tense - will run.