What is the past for write?
past | present | |
---|---|---|
simple | He wrote | He writes |
continuous | He was writing | He is writing |
perfect | He had written | He has written |
perfect continuous | He had been writing | He has been writing |
presentⓘ present simple or simple present | |
---|---|
I | write |
you | write |
he, she, it | writes |
we | write |
Write, Wrote, Written.
took - Simple English Wiktionary.
The past tense of write is wrote: I wrote, you wrote, she wrote, he wrote... Written is a past particle - I've written to the bank, she's written, they've written to me.
The past and past participle forms of the irregular verb 'write' is 'wrote' and 'written' respectively.
Base Form (V1) | write |
---|---|
Past Form (V2) | wrote |
Past Participle Form (V3) | written |
s / es/ ies (V4) | writes |
'ing' form (V5) | writing |
1. Written is the past participle of write. A written test or piece of work is one which involves writing rather than doing something practical or giving spoken answers.
There are three main verb tenses in English: present, past and future.
The V3 version of this word is different from the V1 and V2 forms. The V3 version of this verb is 'written'. 'Written' is used in the case of Past Perfect Tense or Present Perfect Tense. If the question is in the present perfect tense, we use the word write as have + written or has + written.
What is the past and future tense of write?
Simple past: She wrote last night. Past progressive: She was writing when he called. Simple future: She will write tomorrow. Future progressive: She will be writing when you arrive.
He/She/It had taken. I had taken. You/We/They had taken. He/She/It had been taking.

Fell is the past simple of the verb fall: The snow fell all day in big white flakes. He slipped and fell, hurting his leg quite badly. She fell in love with him as soon as they met.
Fought is the past tense and past participle of fight.
Example : informative is to write ; past tense of write write+ ed= writed. Note that since the verb in its informative ends with -e, that drops out, so we end up with writed. But if verb in infinitive form had no - e, for example as in to light;, past tense of light would be just light+ ed= lighted.
Writing a story in past tense allows you to manipulate time, to reveal, and to conceal events. Past-tense fiction creates a more subtle kind of suspense where we may know the outcome of the story but we want to know how and why we ended up there. This is good for more cerebral, reflective characters.
Both are potentially correct, depending on context. The first is the simple past -- it's the most basic form of the past tense. "Wrote" is the past tense of "write." The second might be said in response to a negation, with emphasis on did: "John didn't write this song."