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  • How to say correctly in the past login or logined?
    A person who perform login to site This person: "was login" to site "logined" to site Which version is correct?
  • When to use and not to use Past Perfect? - English Language Usage . . .
    After seeing many examples of past perfect and past perfect progressive, I still can't figure out when and how exactly to use it Some people say it emphasizes the process of an action expressed via past perfect, some people that it puts greater distance between actions of past perfect and past simple and some that it shouldn't be used when it
  • Correct usage of preterit and past perfect - English Language Usage . . .
    The past perfect is generally only used when one event in the past occurs before another This helps the reader to understand which one came first And in fact, if the order of events is clear without using the past perfect, there is no grammatical requirement to use the past perfect In the sentence 1a there are two uses of the past perfect, one before the other The only possible rationale
  • During with Present Perfect? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The action began in the past and continued to the present time he has grown impatient over the last hour This further advice (same ref ) is the key The important thing to remember about the present perfect is that you can’t use it when you are being specific about when [the action] happened correct I have put away all the laundry
  • grammaticality - Past perfect or simple past with ago? - English . . .
    I would never use 'ago' with the past perfect as it is relative to the present, not the past As has been mentioned, you should use 'prior' or 'before' (or 'preceding' if you prefer something more formal) to indicate a point or amount of time before a time in the past
  • Can would rather be followed with a past perfect?
    As such an object in the form of a clause would not use a past (or past perfect) tense verb form If you wish to express your preference for things that have already occurred, the main clause should be put in the past, and rather does not quite work I would have preferred you had not told John about this
  • Past and present perfect tense in scientific articles
    The first clause needs past tense and an article an before algorithm This is the prior situation, and is now past The second clause needs the perfect, in its Stative Resultative sense,, which is used to indicate that the direct effect of a past event still continues in the present (e g, I can't come to your party tonight - I've caught the flu)
  • Past perfect in Crime and Punishment
    The use of past perfect appears in each of the three sentences In all of them, for me, "would" instead of "would have" seems to be clearer "Would have" leads me to read them through a subjunctive or a speculative mood, which I don't see them should imply, according to the scene being described Or they do imply something that I've missed?
  • Modal verbs and Past Perfect - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Present and past verb forms (what some have apparently been taught to call "present simple" and "past simple") are the only tensed verb forms in English, and they are required in all main clauses, and all finite, or tensed, subordinate clauses -- unless the verb phrase in the clause begins with a modal auxiliary
  • How to distinguish and use the present perfect for the recent past . . .
    2 I'm having trouble understanding and using the so-called “perfect of recent past” aspect on the present tense I have three related questions about this which are in bullets, two here and one at the end of my post





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