No, Haath Jor Se Ghumao to best rahta hai. No any tense. this is my practical.
Should is present tense.
The past tense is should.
No, should is actually future tense
Should is the past tense of the verb shall.
Past tense.
Yes, the question should be answerable in the same tense. If the question is asked in present tense, the answer should also be given in present tense.
Methods should be written in the present tense.
The past tense of "should" is "should have." For example, "She should have finished her homework last night."
The traditional tense is past tense.
The past tense is should. e.g. I should have known better.
In the sentence I went bowling yesterday with my family:I is the pronoun subjectwent is the verbbowling is the direct objectthe phrase modifies the word bowlingSally went bowling yesterday with her family - Sally is the noun subject. Pronouns must agree.
You can use should in past tense to say;Should haveShould not have (shouldn't)