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He works hard - Work is the verb, simple enough!
Has has worked hard all his life. The main verb is "worked" (in past participle form) but "has" (acts as a modal) now made the tense present perfect.
So when you are
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
62 days ago
Present Progressive, Tenses, Present Continuous, Present Tenses, Modals, Present Perfect, Sentences, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Continuous Tenses
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You should go. you ~ subject pronoun should ~ modal verb go ~ verb - bare infinitive form _____ They stopped ... they ~ subject pronoun stopped ~ verb - past simple _____ I'll visit ... =I will visit ... I ~ subject pronoun will ~ modal verb
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: When he returns to Manhattan 1000 years later, it has been destroyed and rebuilt three times.
2
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Pemmican wrote: As far as I know, there are these 13 tenses: a) Past Perfect Progressive ........................had been + present participle b) Past Perfect ..........................................had + past participle c) Past Progressive
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
4 yr 141 days ago
Simple Present, Present Progressive, Verbs, Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Modals, Simple Past, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Conditionals, Helping Verbs, Perfect Progressive, Future Progressive
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Paco:
By the way I have a feeling that English 'now' (in the linguistic sense, not in the physical sense) is not instantaneous, but it seems to occupy some span in the time that flows from the past to the future. Otherwise I cannot understand the
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We are having 20 boxes delivered tomorrow.
The above sentence uses what is called "causative form". We use the causative form to indicate that we are not doing something ourselves, but have arranged someone else to do it for us.
The
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Technically, there are two tenses: Present (or Non-Past) and Past.
There are four aspects derived from two aspect pairs (simple vs. perfect and simple vs. progressive): Simple, Perfect, Progressive, and Perfect Progressive
Combining these
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
califjim
4 yr 352 days ago
Regards, Present Progressive, Verbs, Tenses, Past Perfect, Modals, Simple Past, Present Perfect, Past Simple, Conditionals, Perfect Progressive
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Yes, whl you're right!
>>"Learning may be easy, if you are learning from a good teacher, but teaching is work."
Verbs in this sentence are:
may, be;
are, learning;
is
may & be; are & learning belong together - they build the
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