There are two moods for present tense conjugation in Spanish: indicative and subjunctive. The indicative is used most commonly and is usually the first mood taught when learning Spanish.
Indicative
Yo camino
Tú caminas
Ella/Él/Usted camina
Nosotros caminamos
Vosotros camináis
Ellos/Ustedes caminan
Subjunctive
Yo camine
Tú camines
Ella/Él/Usted camine
Nosotros caminemos
Vosotros caminéis
Ellos/Ustedes caminen
Present Indicative Conjugation Table
camino | caminamos
caminas | camin'ais
camina | caminan
cinsbc
Caminar.
It means "to walk."
chuaigh
caminata milla : mile long walk
Assuming that you are referring to the present indicative tense/mood, it would be "tú te acuestas".
Technically, any single conjugation of the verb in the present tense can also be understood as the present progressive. However, to remove all equivocation, the present progressive of caminar is composed of an appropriate present tense conjugation of the Spanish verb to be - estar - plus the present participle of caminar: caminando. Example: Estoy caminando - I am walking.
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.
The verb is is the present tense.
Present perfect tense.
it's present tense actually
"you do" is present tense. The past tense is "you did" and the future tense is "you will do".
The past tense of did is did. The present tense of did is do. The future tense of did is will do.
The present tense of "will be" is "am/is/are." For example, "I am," "he is," "they are."
has is present tense, had is past tense
No 'is' is present tense. am/is/are = present tense was/were = past tense
Have is present tense. The past tense is had.
The present tense of the verb 'was' is is.