"Nervous" is an adjective, it doesn't have a past tense.
It is only verbs that have a past tense.
Trepidation is a noun, that is, a person, place, or thing. The suffix "tion" is a noun suffix. Nouns do not have tenses; only verbs can have tenses.
Terror is a noun. Only verbs have tenses.
The word distraught is an adjective and so doesn't have a past tense. It is only verbs that have tenses.
The tenses of prejudice are past tense (prejudiced), present tense (prejudice), and future tense (will prejudice). Prejudice is an emotion or attitude formed prior to having adequate information, leading to a biased judgment.
felt
The past tenses of "lonely" are "lonelied" and "lonely" itself.
had.
The past tenses of "bring" are "brought" for the simple past and "had brought" for the past perfect.
Simple past: taught Past perfect: had taught
Past tense is act or action done in the past.The past tenses include the simple past, past perfect, past continuous, and past perfect continuous.
Present - am, is, are. Past - was, were.
The past tense is went.
"had not" is the past tense of "have not". (not is an adverb and does not have tenses)
Yes, they are the basic tenses.
There are three simple tenses - past, present and future.
The tenses are used for verbs, not nouns. Status is a noun.
The three standard tenses are forget, forgot, forgotten.