No. Your tenses must agree. Even throughout an entire paragraph, with few exceptions, your tenses must agree. As a rule, if there is a need to change tenses, it indicates that a new paragraph should be started.
Both are correct, but they have slightly different meanings. "I have sent it immediately" suggests that the action was completed very recently, while "I sent it immediately" simply states that the action was done promptly. Both are grammatically correct depending on the context of when it happened.
The word is spelled laughing. Example: I began to cry because I thought she was laughing at me.
A predicate nominative is used with a linking verb and "renames" the subject by stating that the subject is the same as the predicate nominative. Here are some examples: Andrew is the director. My best friend had become my enemy.
"Where are you going?"
Yes, there should be a comma after "for example" when it is used to introduce an example in a sentence. This helps to separate the example from the rest of the sentence for clarity and to indicate a pause.
They nearly died laughing when I tripped over my fallen drawers.
No. Laughing is a verb, laughter is a noun. An example of an adverb used in a sentence would be - The announcer was laughing loudly as he fell out of his chair. Loudly is the adverb.
An epigram is, essentially, a witty saying. An example sentence would be: Her epigram had everyone at the party laughing.
to laugh = tsakhak (צחק) The present tense depends on the subject of the sentence, for example: I am laughing = ani tsokhek (×× ×™ צוחק) she is laughing = hee tsokheket (היא צוחקת)
I must speak with a haberdasher immediately.
I wish she had been immediately enamored of me.
She had her luggage packed immediately. The airline lost our luggage.
Example: Is that awful stench coming from your shoes? Go wash them immediately!
This immediately exposes the folly of using the same advisor.
Both are correct, but they have slightly different meanings. "I have sent it immediately" suggests that the action was completed very recently, while "I sent it immediately" simply states that the action was done promptly. Both are grammatically correct depending on the context of when it happened.
Example sentence - The company was required to audit per the Sarbanes Oxley requirements.
Whenever a new scientific discovery is announced, it is immediately followed by speculation on what it will mean.