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Hi,
could you pls let me know whether this sentence is correct grammatically or not?
*if i haven't received any reply till today, i will return the shpt to the customs.*
in advance thank you for your help
No, it's not
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
clive
31 days ago
Capital Letters, Abbreviations, Present Tenses, Spelling, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Past Simple, Writing, Sentences, Business, Careers
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I told my mom she has gotten a ticket for not speaking English. OR I told my mom she had gotten a ticket for not speaking English. What's the difference between the two sentences? I know one is present perfect and the other past perfect but
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1. So far, he's been faring well.
2. So far, he is faring well. I agree with Avangi's analysis. The first example, with its present perfect tense, takes in the idea of a span of time that is regarded by the speaker as having begun
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Is the use of the word pled in the following example grammatically correct?
The parties have pled not guilty .. In this case the simple past tense and the past participle are identical. (You can always find them listed in your dictionary.)
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It can be put in present perfect and past perfect using "if" like this:
If the train have already left , we shall/will take the next train. (formal present perfect subjunctive)
If the train had already left , we should/would
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Hi Volcano The use of the present perfect continuous (has been changing) does not necessarily indicate that the change is currently still in progress. With the present perfect (simple or continuous), it is never 100% clear whether the activity is
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1 When I use the multi way plug for my computer, I don't pick up all the wifi connections there are. That's because there isn't enough electricty flowing into your computer, and you're computer is running at 50 percent of it's
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Now if I look up "are," the dictionary tells me that it is the present plural of "be." But what I would expect is that it would tell me that it is the present plural of "am" or "is" because those are the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
39 days ago
Plurals, Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Gerunds, Subjunctives, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Adjectives, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Context, Languages
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The verbs in your sentences have different tenses. I bet I stopped listening before you did . bet = simple present tense stopped = simple past tense did = simple past tense (The word "did" is used as a replacement for
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I think the reason why they were complaining was because most of the people had/have paid to hear the actors sing and not you. I think both past perfect and present perfect could work in this situation?
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