Future tense because of the word will. Willmeaning they haven't done it yet. They are going to, so it is future tense.
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Simple Future tense.
An incorrect verb tense occurs when a verb does not match the time frame of the action it is describing in a sentence. For example, using "will go" instead of "went" in a sentence describing a past event would be an incorrect verb tense.
This is when the tense changes in the sentence egWe usually go to the mountains for summer, but last year we went to the beach.go = present tense because it tells about something we usually do, a habit.went = past tense because it tells about something that happened in the past and is completed
WENT is the verb in that sentence. it is a verb in the past tense, the present form of the word being to go.
This sentence is already in the past tense. "Went" is the past tense of the verb "go".
A prepositional phrase is a word or several words that go with a preposition. A preposition is a word like: on, in, to, at, for, by, with, about. Some examples of prepositional phrases are: in the library, with my friend, to the store, through the tunnel.If you want to use a prepositional phrase in a sentence with a present tense verb, you can. For example, "I usually go to the library in the evening." In this sentence, the present tense verb is go, and there are two prepositional phrases: to the library and in the evening.
The past tense verb for "go" is "went."
"will go" is future tense.
Present tense.
The word 'went' is the past tense of the verb to go.The future tense of the verb to go is will go.
I had breakfast this morning and then I will go for a run in the park later.
No, it is a verb. Specifically, it is the past tense of the verb "to go."
No, the sentence contains a mix of verb tenses ("will go" and "you will stop"). To make it consistent in tense, the sentence should be written as "You will go to the bank and then you will stop to see Kate."