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Hi,
In the sentence: I really should go home to my wife, but I need to see the deviltry! Question: Is 'should' a helping verb to 'go'? 'Should' is a modal auxiliary verb
and Is 'need' a helping verb to
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Hello everyone,
I wish it would stop raining – I know ‘wish’ and ‘would’ are the key to the construction - but I don’t know what the tense is… Subject + wish + it (what is it?)+ would (modal auxiliary verb) + verb + gerund
Hi,
You
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They had to have that specially made? The sentence is in the past tense. Since English lacks verbs for situations in which person A does something for person B on person B's request, a rather long and awkward structure is used instead: to have
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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cool breeze
42 days ago
Tenses, Auxiliaries, Present Continuous, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Conditionals, Modal Auxiliaries, Morphology, Future Tenses, Sentences, United Kingdom, Continuous Tenses, Languages
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Terminology varies a little from country to country and ven from grammarian to grammarian. My opinion: Are gerunds verbs? No, but a gerund can take an object and may occur in the passive voice like a verb. I consider a gerund neither a verb nor a
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Hi,
I have difficulty in understanding verb usage(two verbs given and go in same sentence) in below sentence and also please tell me the parts of speech in the sentence.
You need articles as shown. Effective and substantial critiques
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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clive
110 days ago
Articles, Prepositions, Nouns, Auxiliaries, Modals, Gerunds, Modal Auxiliaries, Adjectives, Sentences, Usages, Speaking, Speeches
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Might is always considered a modal in English. However, and that is why I think yours is a good question, in other languages, such as my own – which is Dutch – we do in fact add an adverb to the verb phrase of the sentence. In the end, the
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
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dokterjokkebrok
129 days ago
Nouns, Verbs, Auxiliaries, Modals, Regards, Difference Between, Adverbs, Modal Auxiliaries, Modal Verbs, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages, Sentences
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It is advisable to learn the various ways of using the modal auxiliaries without thinking of grammatical moods at the same time. These auxiliaries lack forms ( must has only one form, for example) and the potential mood, as it exists in some
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There is no modal auxiliary in your sentences. You need does: Only one chance does he have. I don't know how many people would actually say that. I wouldn't. He has only one chance is correct. CB
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This lesson shows how to use these words (they are modal auxiliaries) in sentences. If you have more questions after this lesson, just post more specific questions.
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have done something. had done somthing. If the above sentences were preceded by: could/ would/may..etc
I'm afraid I have to tell you that had done following a defective auxiliary (can, could; will, would; may, might; shall, should; must;
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