The main function of the verb is to show when the action occurs. There are tenses of three main verbs: past, present and future. Each tense is divided into simple, continuous, perfect, and completely continuous.
The present form of verb is "primitive" form. There are various patterns in the past. Simple formation of the future and 'will'
It is important to remember that 's' is added to verbs with simple 'he', 'her', 'that'.
In the tense situation, it is sometimes not enough to explain when behavior occurs, so it is important to use the correct word or phrase to indicate the action time. This can also be seen in other courses.
Therefore, in the past simple tense, there are words or phrases indicating that it is a past action such as "yesterday", "last week / month / year", "one month ago". It is simple and futuristic now.
A simple future tense is a verb tense used to refer to the future. This tense is usually formed by the use of will and should be used for future activities. In addition to these two auxiliary verbs, there are other ways to express the simple future tense shown here.
When you write a novel, you can only write a simple tense. The perfect tense uses two verbs: a verb "has" (depending on tense) and a verb of behavior. Passive sounds are born in the story by using perfect tense. A passive voice means not talking about what is going on but talking. In the novel, you always want to show actions rather than saying it. Your readers do not want to be told. They want to be shown; they want to be drawn into action and into your story. Many of the contemporary stories are written in present form. In other words, new writers need to be careful. A story correctly written in the current tense is also interesting and attractive, because everything happens before the reader. However, it brings complexity to the author. If you start writing with current tense, you need to keep current tense. This means everything you write must happen at that moment. One of the most common errors at the moment is as follows.
Verbs are utilized according to tense. A series of verbs (verbs ending with current tense) have a special form of command (usually verb stem), but for most verbs this command is the same as infinitive. Complete participle and current participle are common as adjective verbs. Compared to English and many other languages, Swedish does not use full participle to form current integrity and past completeness. Conversely, the auxiliary verbs har ("have"), hade ("had") are followed by a special form called supine. This is used only for this purpose (usually the same as the neutral form of complete participle).