13:45 【2023.9.25】English Dictation Practice - Listening Test (MAX SCORE - 71) 英语听力测试 14:55 【英音】Describe Physical Appearance at C1 LEVEL (Advanced) English! 14:03 【英音】The 50 Important Phrasal Verbs in English 重要的动词词组 20:33 【语法】STOP using the 'future tenses' in...
A quick overview of ALL the main verb tenses in English. I explain which are the most important to master for effective communication at various language levels.
13:45 【2023.9.25】English Dictation Practice - Listening Test (MAX SCORE - 71) 英语听力测试 14:55 【英音】Describe Physical Appearance at C1 LEVEL (Advanced) English! 14:03 【英音】The 50 Important Phrasal Verbs in English 重要的动词词组 20:33 【语法】STOP using the 'future tenses' in...
if it could be explained in an answer, Spanish would not be so difficult for foreigners 😅 Pr...
We use progressive tenses to tell that something is happening at the moment, or that it was happening at the moment we’re describing. The use of progressive tenses is very common. The equivalent in English is when verbs end in “-ing” (e.g. reading, playing, cooking). In Spanish thi...
How many English verb tenses are there? 12 or 16? Here's a chart and list of them all, explained with examples.
que el març del 2015 vaentregaren mà la carta de Tina a Alexander, però no va rebre resposta.Speaking on Vancouver morning drive-in radio, opposition Member of Parliament Fin Donnelly explained tha tin March 2015 he had hand-delivered the letter from Tima, his constituent, to Alexander ...
Her eyes set in heaven would give forth such light that birds would sing and think it were not night. Yo les decía que algún día las cepas me cantarían a mi I explained that, someday, the vines would sing back. cante" - Ella hace que mi corazón cante." - Muy bien, qué tal...
Both sentences are correct, but their verb tenses are different. 'I miss you all' expresses a current feeling of longing for someone, while 'I missed you all' expresses that you missed someone in the past. The choice depends on whether you are talking about a current feeling or a past ...
There are two basic rules for converting sentences from active voice into passive voices, which apply to all tenses. The places of the subject and the object in a sentence are interchanged for converting active voice into passive voice.