
Ruediger T. answered 08/14/21
Language expert - German, English, French - 30 years experience
Some grammar questions can be quite complicated but many are not and I try to make all my language students aware of how easy it is to find good and reliable answers to many of their own questions.
This question is a good example. Any good dictionary will provide the answer to it, and many are available online for free. If you look up bring in, for instance Merriam Webster, the first thing you'll see is that the other forms of 'bring' are brought and bringing. Granted, it doesn't directly say that brought is the form for the past tense and also the past participle. But that's a matter of learning how to use dictionaries. Dictionaries have pages where they explain abbreviations and how entries are structured. So the next time you look up a verb and wonder about the form for the past tense, you'll know to find it right below the head entry. Go to check out walk and you'll find walked and walking right there. Merriam Webster is free online. So are conjugation tables, for instance from Reverso, that give you all of the forms of a verb in all of the tenses, simple and compound.
You get the idea: you should try to work as independently as possible! Only when that fails post your question here or turn to a tutor.
Mark M.
Preterite tense is in the conjugation of Spanish verbs. English has four past tenses: past, past perfect, past continuing, past perfect continuing.08/08/21