Past Perfect Continuous
I am laughingWe/You/They are laughingHe/She/It is laughing
The future tense is will laugh.
No. Your tenses must agree. Even throughout an entire paragraph, with few exceptions, your tenses must agree. As a rule, if there is a need to change tenses, it indicates that a new paragraph should be started.
The future tense of "have been" is "will have been."
The past continuous tense is a verb for an action or event in a time before now, which began in the past and is still going on at the time of something interrupting.Example: I was laughing when I spilled the tea.
I am laughingWe/You/They are laughingHe/She/It is laughing
laughed
is laughing = the verb phrase. is = present tense singular be verb laughing = present participle of laugh
He laughs/he is laughing.
The future tense is will laugh.
I am laughing. You are laughing. She/He is laughing. We are laughing. They are laughing. The present continuous tense follows this structure: Subject + auxiliary verb "be" + Present Participle (always ending in -ing)
to laugh = tsakhak (צחק) The present tense depends on the subject of the sentence, for example: I am laughing = ani tsokhek (×× ×™ צוחק) she is laughing = hee tsokheket (היא צוחקת)
Boys can be used in the present tense without any change. I.E., the boys are laughing.
No. Your tenses must agree. Even throughout an entire paragraph, with few exceptions, your tenses must agree. As a rule, if there is a need to change tenses, it indicates that a new paragraph should be started.
The future tense of "have been" is "will have been."
The past continuous tense is a verb for an action or event in a time before now, which began in the past and is still going on at the time of something interrupting.Example: I was laughing when I spilled the tea.
Past tense.