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Agatha, In my grammarbook it is said that every verb-phrase consisting of several verbs, the first will always be finite and the rest non-finite. - When I was a schoolboy, I once noticed that my English teacher made a mistake on the blackboard:
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
19 hr 25 min ago
Tenses, Clauses, Present Tenses, Spelling, Past Tenses, Writing, Sentences, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Mistakes, Negations
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I believe only one sentence of the two is grammarly grammatically correct. Both are correct. You can use either one, and they both have the same meaning. I would use the one with the present tense in a situation where I wanted to give the
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Do/does/did is not used in questions 1. with forms of to be : Is he happy? Were they swimming? 2. with perfect and past perfect auxiliaries : Have you seen him? Had it already begun? 3. sometimes with have/has/had when the verb is in the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
11 days ago
Tenses, Clauses, Pronouns, Auxiliaries, Past Perfect, Whom, Past Tenses, Modal Auxiliaries, Relationships, Writing, Usages, Friendships, Friends
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I thought have was needed before spread to keep a single tense. That would be a good solution:
They have appeared on message boards and in blogs and have spread by word of mouth.
There are no dependent clauses here, by
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Please help me how to use 'if' clause.. how if the clause is in present or past tense, or in present or past perfect tense.. Many thanks for ur kind help :)
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"I saw that Jane came by yesterday." In this sentence "came" is the lexical verb of a subordinate clause hence it must show its relation to time, which in this case is past tense. "That" shows us that this is a
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" I saw Jane come by yesterday. " In this sentence "come" is a bare infinitive. Time is established by the verb "saw" which is in past tense form. " I saw that Jane came by yesterday. " In this sentence
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doesn’t have to be ““If it had not been for” have to is such a strong expression! No. Actually, it doesn't absolutely have to be If it had not been for . The substitute clause If it weren't for is often used instead, even though it's
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I was looking through one of my grammar-test books and encountered such a sentence: Celia has just phoned to ask if YOU HAVE FINISHED your part of the project yet. Shouldn't it be HAD YOU FINISHED instead of the above? It is reported speech,
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"If you knew what I had gone through, you would surely pity me."
Don't listen to these people. You can change it to "have" because only the first verb has to be in the subjunctive mood. The verb "knew" is
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
36 days ago
Tenses, Clauses, Simple Past, Subjunctives, Past Tenses, Conditionals, Writing, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Simple Tenses, Languages
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