| 1. | The forms listed above can occur in both present and past tense.
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| 2. | Byrne would like the incident to be put in the past tense.
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| 3. | It really is difficult to refer to him in the past tense.
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| 4. | Abramowitz uses the past tense in discussing Cuny, perhaps assuming the worst.
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| 5. | The topic of the day was the past tense of regular verbs.
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| 6. | Then Lundy caught himself talking of his father in the past tense.
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| 7. | It is the past tense of a future that will never be.
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| 8. | You almost feel compelled to talk in the past tense about Cincinnati.
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| 9. | By 1985, however, such bit parts were all but past tense.
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| 10. | The past tense of underived verbs descended from the PIE perfect.
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