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  1. Feb 10, 2020 · 111. "Have had" is using the verb have in the present perfect tense. Consider the present tense sentence: I have a lot of homework. This means that I have a lot of homework now. On the other hand, we use the present perfect tense to describe an event from the past that has some connection to the present. Compare the following two sentences: I ...

  2. 1 个回答. -ense可以表示地理位置和某个地方的住民,-ensis表示地理位置,-ianum好像是表示起源,它们的阴阳性也是不同的(我不太懂,建议你去查 拉丁词典. 知乎,中文互联网高质量的问答社区和创作者聚集的原创内容平台,于 2011 年 1 月正式上线,以「让人们 ...

  3. Apr 18, 2015 · An idea I have for an alternative is 'is consistent'. But I'm looking for something that's better. I am looking for a succinct answer that implies consistency, and to be used in arguments.

  4. You can consider “begun in 1078” as an abbreviated form of the relative clause “which was begun”. The issue really is the transitive verb “begin” versus the intransitive verb “begin”.

  5. Dec 14, 2014 · Got is both a past tense and a past participle. In its past participle form, I have got a blue car, got signifies possession - I am in possession of a blue car. Thus far all of the above is the same both in Britain and America. Where got refers to the process of acquisition, in the perfect and pluperfect Americans say I have just gotten a copy ...

  6. Apr 20, 2017 · 4. When 'recently' or 'lately' is used with present perfect progressive: Since the adverbs recently and lately both suggest that something is done either " at a recent time " or " not long ago ", using these words to describe a particular ongoing action in the past does not necessarily imply that the action is continuing right up to the present ...

  7. The past tense of putis put; the past tense of puttis putted. Since inputis formed from "put" rather than "putt", it seems logical that its past tense should be input, rather than "inputted"; "inputted" sounds like a demented golfing term. Share. Improve this answer. Follow.

  8. Sep 28, 2018 · Present tense. It is a basic sentence. Subject (I, a pronoun), verb (to be) first person, present tense, and a predicate adjective (broken, a description). Different meaning than "I am broke." The former, depending on the context, e.g. run down, tired, depressed, etc. The latter specifically means "out of money."

  9. Oct 13, 2014 · Forgot, the past tense, is OK with any subject. The word neverhas nothing to do with the verb, except that it must either go after the first auxiliary verb, or right before the main verb if there is no auxiliary (as here). – John Lawler. CommentedOct 13, 2014 at 19:48. Hello, Alice. Unfortunately, this is not a question appropriate to this site.

  10. 5. "today" means literally "within the current window of 24 hours starting at midnight". That includes past, present, and future. It is not wrong, as long as you found the ball in the past. – tenfour. CommentedDec 16, 2011 at 9:04. 1. Canonical example of today with simple past: "I read the news today, oh boy..." – Daniel Roseman.