The past tense of "will" depends on context. As a modal verb for future actions or intentions, its past tense is "would." When "will" acts as a regular verb meaning to bequeath or intend forcefully, the past tense is "willed."

Modal "Will" → "Would"

"Will" expresses future predictions, offers, or willingness (e.g., "I will help tomorrow").
In the past, switch to would : "She said she would help."

This shifts time without changing the verb form much, as modals lack traditional conjugation.

Examples in Action :

  • Present/future: "It will rain soon."
  • Past: "I thought it would rain."
  • Reported speech: "He will call" becomes "He said he would call."

Regular Verb "Will" → "Willed"

Rarely, "will" means to determine by willpower or leave in a will (e.g., "Will your estate to charity").
Past tense: willed (e.g., "She willed her fortune to her kids").

Past participle: also willed (e.g., "He had willed it away").

Quick Comparison Table

Context| Base Form| Past Simple| Past Participle| Example Sentence
---|---|---|---|---
Modal (future)| will| would| would| "Would you join us?** 3
Regular (bequeath/intend)| will| willed| willed| "Taylor willed herself calm." 1

Common Pitfalls & Trending Discussions

Forums like Brainly note "would" as the modal past. No major 2026 grammar shifts; it's timeless English.

TL;DR : Use would for future-in-past; willed for the noun/verb sense.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.