infinitive: break
past: broke
past participle: broken
Destroyed is the past tense of destroy...therefore there is not a past tense for destroyed.
The past tense is smote.
"Responsible" is an adjective. It does not have a past tense. Instead, the past tense would apply to the word before. (Present - she is responsible, Past - she was responsible.)
The word 'at' is not a verb and so doesn't have a past tense.
The past tense of amaze is amazed.
Broken is a past participle, which doesn't show any tense without auxiliary verbs. Examples: Had broken - past perfect tense Has/Have broken - present perfect tense Will have broken - future perfect tense
The past perfect tense is had broken.
The past tense of break is broke.broken
The simple past tense is broke. The past participle is broken.
The past perfect tense is created with the auxiliary verb had and a past participle.Examples:The past perfect tense of walk is had walked. (Walk is a regular verb, so the past tense and past participle are the same.)The past perfect tense of break is had broken. (Break is an irregular verb. The past tense is broke, and the past participle is broken.)
The word 'broke' is already the past tense of the word 'break'.The present perfect tense is 'have broken'.
I had broken.
infinitive: breakpast: brokepast participle: broken
I / he / she / it was breaking. They / you / we / were breaking
broken up
Broken is a past participle verb therefore can not be used in the past simple tense. You could use it in the past passive like: The lamp was broken by the boy. This is a past passive sentence. Otherwise, verb 3 can not be used in a past simple sentence structure. Another way to use broken is as an adjective. The broken vase laid on the floor.
All verbs have a past tense form and a past participle form. For regular verbs, the past tense and past participle ends in -ed.Example:walk (present tense) walked (past tense and past participle)Irregular verb do not have the -ed ending.Example:run (present tense) ran (past tense) run (past participle)