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These are the tenses I had to choose between; Present Simple, Past Simple, Present Continuous, Past Continuous, Present Perfect, Past Perfect, Present Perfect Continuous, Past Perfect Continuous, Future with 'Going To', Future Simple,
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
fromwalestojapan
157 days ago
Present Continuous, Past Perfect, Past Tenses, Past Simple, Interviews, Marriage, Arts, Relationships, Business, Countries, Asia, China, Continuous Tenses, Apologies, Music
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Hi,
In addition to the previous post, here is a reference that may help you.
Whenever we use reference of time passed, like last week, and yesterday, a simple past tense will do just fine, and also, Words of past time is never to be used
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
goodman
283 days ago
Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Simple Past, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, References, Business, Career, Countries, Asia, China, Simple Tenses
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Hi. I was googling for some information for English education in Korea and came up with this article by Yoon Won-sup, staff reporter, of THE KOREA TIMES under the title of "Secrets of European Teaching Method," and I am going to ask some
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
354 days ago
Articles, Past Perfect, Spelling, Past Tenses, Learning English, Writing, References, Business, Career, Countries, Students, Asia, Korea, Classes, Languages
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The "for" is optional - you can use both. Simple past tense is fine. Present perfect is not OK, because your sentence implies that you are no longer living in France. Present perfect is used to mean continuation up to the present. Past
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
alpheccastars
360 days ago
Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Simple Past, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Perfect Progressive, Sentences, References, Business, Career, Countries, United States, France, American
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misc.education.language.english
by
pat durkin
3 yr 334 days ago
Past Tenses, Subjunctives, Punctuation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, United States, Usages, References, Business, Career, Languages, Past Perfect
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Well, you know, looked at structurally, Latin had three tenses ... which are conventionally the six "tenses", with the following names: 'I have gone' is the same as 'I went' (and even in English, "I have gone"
alt.usage.english
by
aaron j. dinkin
5 yr 284 days ago
Tenses, Past Tenses, Business, Context, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Past Perfect, References, Career, Languages, Present Tenses, Present Perfect, Degree
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