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Hi,
*I HAVE GONE is " Present Past Perfect Tense"
'I had gone' is Past Perfect.
Clive
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Example: I learned more today than I did all week. (OR) I learned more today than I had all week. Are both sentences correct? Since 'learned' is past tense, would it be accurate to use 'had' because it is past perfect? The
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Hi Anon Although "had" is possible, I think I'd prefer "did". I don't think anyone would interpret a real difference in terms of meaning. By the way, you could also use "have" (rather than "did" or
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It is always (?) possible; past perfect is a stylistic tool-- it makes good writing.
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"Forgive me, but I've--I've got an appointment." A smile curved across her mouth. It hadn't been a lie , not in the strick sense of the word.
Could you explain why use "hadn't been a lie" here? Why 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
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cool breeze
9 days ago
Tenses, Clauses, Pronouns, Auxiliaries, Past Perfect, Whom, Past Tenses, Modal Auxiliaries, Relationships, Writing, Usages, Friendships, Friends
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Sorry to butt in like this. I'm sure Clive will give his expert advice but let me try to explain it the way I see it (from a non native speaker's point of view).
Regarding the New York sentence, since both the living/working
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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dimsumexpress
12 days ago
Past Perfect, Simple Past, Past Tenses, Sentences, Online, Websites, Usages, Speaking, Speeches, Simple Tenses, Apologies
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What about 3 days ago? Should I use past perfect or present perfect?
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Hi,
Really, I don't feel I have anything I want to add at this point, and I don't want to get repetitive.
My advice is that you digest things a bit and let them settle in your mind. At the same time, every time you use Past
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Sorry to butt in like this. I'm sure Clive will give his expert advice but let me try to explain it the way I see it (from a non native speaker's point of view).
Regarding the New York sentence, since both the living/working occur
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