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Hi Musesun "This forbidden to make money in the university" is not a correct sentence. The word "forbidden" is not a tense at all -- it is just the past participle (V3) of the verb 'forbid'. You can say "This is forbidden", but you cannot say
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Hi Bokeh,
Becasue of your reply, it made me take a second look at the original question. I also did some research and found this paper written on the subject of Semantic Composition of Subjunctive Conditionals by Michela Ippolito of
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
goodman
2 yr 314 days ago
Conversations, Dates, Difference Between, Constructions, Tenses, Clauses, Modals, Literature, Simple Past, Universities, Subjunctives, Present Perfect, Conditionals, Morphology
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First, let me make a few observations.
1. All wishes are counterfactual. It makes no sense to wish for what you already have. The Queen of England does not say, "I wish I were the Queen of England". If I am six feet tall, I do not say, "I wish
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http://ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/progressive.htm #begin quote The progressive forms of a verb indicate that something is happening or was happening or will be happening. When used with the past, the progressive form shows the limited duration of an
misc.education.language.english
by
usenet
6 yr 33 days ago
Regards, Tenses, Difference Between, Nouns, Universities, Pronouns, Constructions, Present Tenses, Simple Present, Dynamic Verbs, Stative Verbs, Simple Past
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