The simple present of "prefer" is "prefer." For example, "I prefer coffee over tea."
Answer is the simple present tense of answer.
Sit is the simple present tense.
Present simple: I/You/We/They lead. He/She/It leads. The present participle is leading. Present continuous: I am leading. You/We/they are leading. He/She/It is leading.
The simple present tense of "get" is "gets" for third person singular (he/she/it) and "get" for all other pronouns (I, you, we, they).
I/you/we/they look. He/she/it looks. The present participle is looking.
I/you/we/they prefer. He/she/it prefers. The present participle is preferring.
I prefer you prefer he prefers she prefers it prefers we prefer you prefer they prefer
Answer is the simple present tense of answer.
Present simple.
The present simple is strike.
Sit is the simple present tense.
The simple present tense of can is just can.
Present simple: I/You/We/They lead. He/She/It leads. The present participle is leading. Present continuous: I am leading. You/We/they are leading. He/She/It is leading.
Yes when people refer to the "present tense" they often mean the "simple present tense". The other present tenses are normally referred to as such. For example, the "present perfect tense".Also:It is called present simple or simple present because it has one verb.
the simple present tense and the present tense.
No, it is a verb. It is the present tense, third person singular of the verb "to prefer."
Contribute is the present simple tense.