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8. "I already asked her" is in simple past tense, indicating that the event occurred in the past. "I have already asked her" is in present perfect tense and is used in situations where a past event has relevance to the current situation. These get used interchangeably, but if you want to be exactly correct, it depends on the context of your ...
11 de jun. de 2011 · stefy. 109 1 1 4. Add a comment. -1. "I have asked a question" is a correct, grammatical sentence which expresses something that happened at an unspecified time in the past. The exact time at which you asked the question is not important, otherwise you could have used the past, present, or future tense.
20 de ago. de 2014 · 1. Grammatically it functions in much the same way. It doesn't mean the same thing: "then" indicates that there is a sequence, while "also" does not. "Jack went to school in France. Also, he was born there," makes sense. "Jack went to school in France. Then he was born there" does not.
3. Some websites have varying answers regarding the placement of also (adverb) whether it should precede before the auxillary 'have' or after. Such as: Whoever was in your shoes, they would also have done that. Or. Whoever was in your shoes, they would have also done that. Moreover, I believe that this website can help me clarify this up ...
In the following, which is better to write between two sentences: ". Also " or ", and also " : Another drawback in the convenient setting is that operational vector fields do not have integral curves. Also, for kinematic vector fields integral curves do not need to exist locally, and if they exist they may not be unique for a given initial value.
31 de jan. de 2019 · 0. Depends on what your emphasis is, but it is a matter of opinion. If you write 'migrants also are...' you emphasize the ALSO, like retorting an argument where someone has missed that point. If you write 'migrants are also...' then the emphasis on ALSO is weakened. I personally would write like this: 'expats are migrants too'.
28 de jan. de 2019 · Under normal circumstances, "finally asked", and "finally would ask" are not quite the same. "Asked" is for an event that happened in the past. "Would ask" can be used in either of 2 ways: for an event that used to happen as a general recurring pattern (probably more than once) in the past, OR for an event which, from a past perspective , will happen in the future (i.e. the past tense of "will ...
4 de jul. de 2014 · All adverbs (also inclusive) can be used at the beginning of a sentence with the proper punctuation. For instance, the first sentence in this answer begins with an adverb. Other examples are: Furthermore, we have exhausted all the other options. Definitely, you can use my car. Surely, he could do better.
18 de jun. de 2011 · Add a comment. 2. "Too" and "also" both mean "in addition" and are interchangeable in all the examples you have given (even "I also forgot my homework"). You can use either. Again you can use either, although the excessive use of commas (as in "I, too, forgot my homework" disjoints a sentence and makes it less readable).
4 de out. de 2017 · He has asked for my telephone number is also correct, because they aren't talking about specified time - it happened, but it's not in the context of specified time, place etc. Obviously, nobody would care in common conversation and everyday's language usage, the past simple version would be better in common usage, but I'm just curious if my teacher was right or not.