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These examples I think are tricky.
1) Do you drive to work? I am pretty certain - B) No, I take the train now- is the correct answer because the question was asked in a simple present form and thus the answer should be given accordingly in
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1. I can't find a context for this one.
2. I've had a bad experience with my car. There's no way I'm going to pay to have it repaired again. That's it. We're through. "I usually go to work by car; but this week, I take the bus."
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Milky wrote:
Which would you say is "correct", and why?
1. I'm usually going to work by car, but this week I take the bus.
2. I usually go to work by car, but this week I take the bus.
3. I usually go to work by car, but this week I'm
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Hello Astraea I too am a learner of English, but let me answer to your question. Are you asking if the sentences like below are correct? I write a letter now. I just finish my assignment. No, both are incorrect. Do you ask why? Are you
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Murof,
Yes, you can actually use present tense. Yes, the meaning is a bit changed, but the difference is minimal.
I have a tendency to explain such differences in impressionistic terms,
so I'll just say that, to my ear, "is used" (in
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: When he returns to Manhattan 1000 years later, it has been destroyed and rebuilt three times.
2
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Pemmican wrote: As far as I know, there are these 13 tenses: a) Past Perfect Progressive ........................had been + present participle b) Past Perfect ..........................................had + past participle c) Past Progressive
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
4 yr 259 days ago
Simple Present, Present Progressive, Verbs, Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Modals, Simple Past, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Conditionals, Helping Verbs, Perfect Progressive, Future Progressive
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Hi all
Hi TS. As you said, we don't know how to define present and future. But we can strictly define a grammatical category , in terms of morphology. A grammatical category consists of a paradigmatic opposition of morphological forms. Thus we
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Hello guys
I googled on the uses of "I study Japanese" and "I'm/am studying Japanese".
Now I study Japanese. 125
I study Japanese now. 7
Now I'm/am studying Japanese. 311
I'm/am studying Japanese now. 136
In the case of the verb
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Abbie
Thank you for such a quick reply!
So if we say "Now I study English in school", it sounds to you as natural as "I am now studying English in school" or "Now I am studying English in school"?
I think what he argued was a question
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