Struck is the past tense of strike.
The verb strike is irregular as the past tense is struck. If the verb was regular then the past tense form would end in -ed.
The word struck is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb "strike".
The past perfect tense is had struck.
Yes. If it was present tense, it would be strike.
It is either a verb or adjective - it is the past tense and one past participle (along with stricken) of the verb "strike". Examples: The car struck him. (verb) A struck coin, a struck batter, a struck pedestrian (adjective)
No. Struck would be a verb. It is past tense, but it isn't an idea, it is an action that happened.
No. It is two words, struck out. It is a past tense verb form combining "struck" (which can be a noun) with "out," an adverb.
Past verb tense: We drank.Present verb tense: We are drinking.Future verb tense: We will drink.
The past tense of the verb 'am' is 'was' or 'were.' The verb 'am' is derived from the verb 'to be.'
The verb is still "to be", regardless of the tense. It is an irregular verb, and the past tense forms are was for I and he/she/it, and were for we, you, and they.
This is the imperfect tense. (verb)= present tense (verb)ed= perfect tense was (verb)ing= imperfect tense Perfect and imperfect are both forms of the past tense.
"Our" is not a verb, so it has no tense.