The future tense for the verb to cause is:
I will cause
you will cause
s/he will cause
we will cause
you will cause
they will cause
so the past tense is dense. its an adjective
it depends on which cool. Like the cool as in hot and cold it would be cooled. But, if it was for popular it would be ,was cool
If the sun were to suddenly turn into a black hole, it would not affect Earth's orbit or cause it to be sucked in. However, the lack of sunlight would lead to a rapid drop in temperature, causing all life on Earth to perish.
The verb in the sentence is "needs to be tuned." To make it present tense, you would say "The piano needs to be tuned."
Decreasing the length or increasing the thickness of the wire would cause its resistance to decrease.
"Would be" is both a future tense and a conditional
Were is a past tense form of be. The future tense of be is will be.
No. That is the present tense; the future tense of that would be 'we will become', and the past tense would be 'we have become' or 'we became'.
No, "slide" is the present tense. The future tense would be "will slide".
That would be future tense.
No, "flee" is not in the future tense. The future tense of "flee" would be "will flee" or "shall flee."
Would is past tense, the present and future tense is will. would've (would have)
No, will clean is future tense. Clean is present tense.
Past tense.
"Enlarges" is a present tense verb. "Enlarged" would be the past tense, and "will enlarge" would be the future tense.
Will.
The future tense verb for the sentence "The outline is ready" would be "will be." So the future tense sentence would be "The outline will be ready."