Is speed present tense?
The third-person singular simple present indicative form of speed is speeds. The present participle of speed is speeding. The past participle of speed is sped or speeded (Britain).
What is the future tense of fast?
I will/shall be fasting. You/We/They will/shall be fasting. He/She/It will/shall have fasted.
What is the past form of speed?
speed
present simple I / you / we / they speed | /spiːd/ /spiːd/ |
---|---|
he / she / it speeds | /spiːdz/ /spiːdz/ |
past simple speeded | /ˈspiːdɪd/ /ˈspiːdɪd/ |
past participle speeded | /ˈspiːdɪd/ /ˈspiːdɪd/ |
-ing form speeding | /ˈspiːdɪŋ/ /ˈspiːdɪŋ/ |
Is then the future?
You can use “then” in a future sense. A classic example is from the New Testament, 1 Corinthians 13. I put the examples of future “then” in bold: For we know in part, and we prophesy in part.
Has already came or come?
If the sentence is re-stated as: He already has come. it is easier to see the present perfect tense. (Note that despite its name, the “present perfect” is a past action tense).
What tense is have already?
Present Perfect Tense
Has already left or had already left?
“He had left before I arrived.” “Has left” (present perfect) is used to locate an action in the past in various cases, e.g. when the past action has effects up to the day when the speaker is speaking, or when a situation located in the past is still unchanged when the story is told.
Did she leave or left?
It is an Interrogative sentence. Did + leave means left. Therefore, it is correct.
Has already been has been already?
So “has already been” is an idiomatic thing to say in English; “has been already” is not, unless you insert additional information into the phrase (“has been there already”, for example). “Already” needs to fall either at the very end of the sentence, or else between the two parts of the verb, “has” and “been”.