leave/leaving
The present tense of "left" is "leave".
Present tense: leave Past tense: left Future tense: will leave
The present tense for "left" is "leave" or "leaves" depending on the subject.
"Leave" can be both past and present tense. In the present tense, it is the base form of the verb (e.g., "I leave for work at 8 AM."), while in the past tense, it becomes "left" (e.g., "I left my keys at home yesterday.").
The present tense for spread is spread.
The present tense of "left" is "leave".
Present tense: leave Past tense: left Future tense: will leave
The present tense for "left" is "leave" or "leaves" depending on the subject.
"Leave" can be both past and present tense. In the present tense, it is the base form of the verb (e.g., "I leave for work at 8 AM."), while in the past tense, it becomes "left" (e.g., "I left my keys at home yesterday.").
The present perfect tense of leave is have/has left. The present perfect tense of eat is have/has eaten.
"Leave" is the present tense; "left" is the past tense and past participle.
The present tense for spread is spread.
The present tense of tasted is taste(s).
the present tense of realised is realise. As in "It didn't take long to realise he left the house with no trousers on".
I/you/we/they spend. He/she/it spends. The present participle is spending.
going somewhere
Future tense - Subject + Will + Verb. Present tense - Subject + Verb. (He/she/it adds an -s on to the end of the verb)