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If your answer was "yes" to the above question, you will go to step 2. This is possible, but as an instruction the imperative would normally be used. If your answer was "yes", go to step 2. If you would, I will be happy. This
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Hello, I'm confused about the sentence "I wish you had never been born."
I don't quite get why the "had" is used.. is that making the sentence have past perfect tense? Or does it have something to do with
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I just want to point out the word "could" is indicative of the subjunctive mood Modal verbs don't have tenses and moods in the way that other verbs do. could certainly acts like a past subjunctive in If I could help you, I would.
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It's Mexico, you're lucky if you made 20k a year. Could this be seen as a conditional sentence by putting made in the past tense? Since we're conversing in the present but I'm implying that he'd be lucky if he hypothetically
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Hello everyone!
Some questions were coming up with my head while watching TV drama 'Supernatural'.
There were scripts like following.
1. If the ghosts are in hell, how can they hear the chanting?
2. If the ghosts were in
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So the had to implies that the sentence is past tense?
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Here's how it should be:
Jackson would have celebrated his fiftieth birthday this August if he were alive .
Jackson would have celebrated his fiftieth birthday this August if he had not died earlier this year .
There are a
Basic English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
35 days ago
Past Perfect, Past Tenses, Present Tenses, Conditionals, Present Progressive, Subjunctives, Simple Past, Simple Present, Present Continuous, Simple Tenses, Continuous Tenses
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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
35 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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If that end (he wanted to unify Germany) COULD BE ACHIEVED without war, he WAS PREPARED to do without (a war). Strange. I see nothing odd in the sentence. As I understand it, both could and was are simply in the past tense. CB
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Game has already been released. If we still have or had to wait for a patch, what is or was the point of releasing the game on the official release date? What's wrong with this sentence? Also is there another usage for had aside from the
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