present
The future tense of wish is "will wish"
The past tense of wish is wished. ex) "I wish I had a pony" and "I wished for a pony"
past: wished
The past is wished.
The word wish is a regular verb. The past tense is wished.
The future tense of wish is "will wish"
The past tense of wish is wished. ex) "I wish I had a pony" and "I wished for a pony"
past: wished
The past is wished.
The word wish is a regular verb. The past tense is wished.
wished as in "I wished that my prince/ss would come, and s/he did!"
'were' is used when you wish to talk in past tense. it is the past tense version of 'are' examples: the men were hunting the fox. those days were very difficult for me.
The present tense of have is have. As in 'I have'. If you wish this to be clarified, the perfect tense is 'I have had' the past tense is 'I had' and the future is 'I will have'
I/you/we/they wish. He/she/it wishes. The present participle is wishing.
wish or wishes I wish for a long life She wishes for money
You could write "will toil" or "will be toiling." It depends on which verbal aspect you wish to use.
You shouldn't, at least not in formal writing. What you use is the subjunctive - which often looks like the simple past, except in the first and third persons singular of the verb TO BE. For example: "I wish I were able to help," and " We all wish the world were a better place."