-
Is 'might' a past tense form of 'may'? It depends on whom you ask. You certainly cannot always use might as a past tense of may but the sequence of tenses requires might in sentences like this: I knew that he might know the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
319 days ago
Difference Between, Tenses, Auxiliaries, Modals, Whom, Past Tenses, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages
-
Both of the sentences below use Simple Past. s there any difference between the meaning of the two sentence caused by the change in words? 1. Bluegrass musician Bill
Monroe, whose repertory, views on musical collaboration, and vocal style
-
Hello Guest
Since this is for an exam, I don't feel I should give detailed replies. But you may wish to consider:
1. Why the following sentences are ungrammatical:
a) Never watch I television.
b) Which programmes watched you?
Look
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mrpedantic
5 yr 48 days ago
Grammar, Possessives, Difference Between, Tenses, Nouns, Pronouns, Past Perfect, Whom, Present Perfect, Uncountable Nouns, Countable Nouns, Determiners
-
Also, if you count "will" as constituting a tense on ... As a separate tense of its own (the past future)? The use of will/shall to form the future tense is only one use of the word. It still remains a modal auxiliary, with a past tense.
alt.usage.english
by
aaron j. dinkin
5 yr 286 days ago
Whom, Tenses, Difference Between, Past Tenses, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Past Perfect, Languages, Auxiliaries, Modals, Future Tenses, Modal Auxiliaries
-
If we are using the scientific, linguistic, narrow sense, there are exactly two tenses in English. If we are using ... differences are of no consequence, except that they are just extra bits of terminology that would have to be learned. I think I
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|