When writing a summary of a lecture, you should use the present tense to describe the main points and ideas presented. This helps to make the summary feel more immediate and engaging for the reader.
The word "you are" is used in the present tense. "You were" is used in the past tense.
"Be" can be used in various tenses, including present tense (am, is, are), past tense (was, were), and future tense (will be).
It doesn't have a tense as it isn't a verb.
Present tense is used to describe things that are happening now or are generally true. Past tense is used to describe things that have already happened.
Wore is past tense. The present tense is wear.
Depending on how it's used, it can be either.As a verb, the participle is used with an auxiliary verb to create the progressive (continuous) tense. Example: Dave is learning Spanish.When a present participle is used as a noun, it is called a gerund. Example: Learning is a lot of fun.
Just used the past tense word of what you are trying to describe. For example -He is running. Past tense. He ran.
He wrote a letter. wrote is the past tense of write. Writes is the form of write that is used with he/she or it
The word "you are" is used in the present tense. "You were" is used in the past tense.
"Be" can be used in various tenses, including present tense (am, is, are), past tense (was, were), and future tense (will be).
A forum used for lecture purposes :)
'Have been written' is in the present perfect tense. It is formed by combining the present tense of 'have' with the past participle 'been' and the past participle of the main verb 'written'. This tense is often used to indicate actions that started in the past and are still relevant in the present.
"Had used" is the past perfect tense.
No, "have" is the present tense. (to have) The past tense would be "had".
It is the past tense.
It doesn't have a tense as it isn't a verb.
Present tense is used to describe things that are happening now or are generally true. Past tense is used to describe things that have already happened.