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Could you tell me when to use just, yet, alredy, ever and never with the Present Perfect Tense. I know where to put these adverbs in a sentence (at the end of a sentence OR between the helping verb and the main verb), but I am not sure which of
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Hi Anon: If you look in any English language reference book under verb tenses, you will find the answer to your question. "be" is a helping verb (auxilliary) for the passive voice of verbs, and "have" is the helping verb for
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
alpheccastars
126 days ago
Simple Present, Verbs, Auxiliaries, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Simple Past, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Helping Verbs, Adjectives, References, Business, Career, Simple Tenses, Languages
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So for number 3, you can't say: I haven't play that game yet? That's right, you must write "played". And for present perfect tense, does it always have the word have in it? Yes. "have" is the helping verb in all
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OK. These 2 sentences use the present perfect tense. The present perfect tense uses the verb "have" as a helping verb (auxilliary) and it is followed by the past participle of the main verb. Here are some examples: I have been to the
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1. Who keeps buying all the swords? OK. 2. I don't care who the guy roots for. OK 3. I haven't played that game yet. <--- why it is played OK, this is present perfect tense. "have" is the helping verb and it is followed by
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Ate is the simple past tense. Eaten is past participle, which is used with a helping verb to indicate an action already completed by some point of time in the past ( have eaten is present perfect form becasue action is completed by now, had eaten
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Eaten is the past participle. Have is an auxillary or helping verb. Put both forms together and you have created the present perfect form.
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Hi, In your example, "has" and "have" are both in the same time frame, or "tense." The mail has been sent in the recent past. This tense is called "present perfect." "Perfect" means the action is
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
avangi
285 days ago
Regards, Simple Present, Verbs, Difference Between, Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Simple Past, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Helping Verbs, Simple Tenses
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I think your question is what does it mean when one says "I have had," or "I had had" because no one can say I had have." I have had is a present perfect of to have The present perfect is a 2 part present tense starting
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Pieanne wrote:
"Busy" is not a past participle, and you can't have a passive form without a past participle.
"Busy" is simply an adjective, and "have been" the present perfect form of "to be".
Thank you.
So here, I think
have
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