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The tense of this sentence suggests that this is no longer true.
If you say: "I have never won any type of awards", then you mean up to this point.
Technically, you need to complete this sentence, like: until I started college or
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As soon as you see her, you say: Finally! I've been waiting so long! You use the present tense because there is no reason to use the past perfect unless there is a past reference point. The reference point is the moment she arrived, which can
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
kooyeen
48 days ago
Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Dialects, Simple Past, Past Tenses, References, Business, Career, Restaurants, Simple Tenses
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Oh dear, Lisa– I believe that you'd better dig out that old grammar book of yours and refresh your memory. 'Had had' is nothing at all like a double negative, but it is a typical past perfect verb formation (just like 'had gone', 'had been' and
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Could it be "Have you worked hard at some things and saw your friend ..."?-- NO, THAT'S WHY I CORRECTED IT. ' Have you worked...and seen... .'
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Hi. Thank you so much.
Do you think the present tense and past tense in the part I am about to mention as I wrote it in the first post in an impossible (incorrect) combination? I am talking about the part "Have you worked hard at some
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These are OK: Have you worked hard at some things and seen your friend , who didn't do/hadn't done anything, get all the credit for what you worked / had worked hard for? Did you work hard at something and see your friend , who didn't do/hadn't
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Hi. Would you say the underlined past perfect tense is correct? Would you say the past tense "worked" is correct too? What would you say if the beginning part were changed to "Did you work hard" instead of "Have you worked
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I need an answer what is the past perfect of the word sweat?
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If you are not sure, you may still be confused even with the best explanations.
But here are a few rules and examples:
1) Does he have a car? In question form, even 3rd still takes the bare infinitve form (have) because of the modal word
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you _____ a lot of money If ... had sold is the pattern if plus a past perfect, so the main clause needs would have and a past participle. You can use any of these: would have made would have received would have enjoyed would have collected
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