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I'm still somewhat confused regarding the subjunctive mood. Suppose we are talking about two different people, two "hes", is this correct?
(1) He is rich, and he wishes he were rich.
(2) He was rich, and he wishes he
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
ferdis
77 days ago
Simple Present, Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Simple Past, Subjunctives, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Future Tenses, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Simple Tenses
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1. I used to drive (simple past) 2. I usually drive (simple present ) 3. I 'm used to driving ( simple present) " I " is capitalized in English. Let me add this for further explanation He was used to having everything done
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A new printer for the faculty room purchased as soon as the requisition slip is signed.
(A) will be (B) would be (C) had been (D) has been
Hi,
Of course, I'd pick A for the above question.
But B seems all
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A new printer for the faculty room purchased as soon as the requisition slip is signed.
(A) will be (B) would be (C) had been (D) has been
Hi,
Of course, I'd pick A for the above question.
But B seems all
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you can use both of them, but i suggest you choose the first one which use simple present because, for a news, i find they almost use simple present present tense for headline of newspaper
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There are three basic types of conditional sentences The first type is ( Factual conditional sentences ) If you study, you will pass the exam If + Simple present , will / simple present if you speak english, i'd be thankful Your sentence
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Hi,
Could anybody help me with the writing below?
Schedule
26-08-09
03:30 Walking up/ Wake up/ waking up / wake up (which one is the correct one?)
Usually, such things are done with Simple Present,
eg 8:00 am Get up.
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I can't give you an explanation as to why, but the non-inflected form just sounds wrong in the first sentence. Can someone help? I guess it's because of the verb "to see" used in the simple present. I agree. An action can never
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I can't give you an explanation as to why, but the non-inflected form just sounds wrong in the first sentence. Can someone help? I guess it's because of the verb "to see" used in the simple present. In the present, it's
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I don' think using " since " in here would be grammatically correct Since means " from a time in the past until a later past time " Your sentence is general , so you should use simple present tense " to talk about a
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