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I could have helped you yesterday
Her enthusiasm for problem solving helped win the grand prize.Her enthusiasm for problem solving helped win the grand prize.Her enthusiasm for problem solving helped win the grand prize.Her enthusiasm for problem solving helped win the grand prize.
Yes. It helped you is a complete sentence. It = subject helped = verb you = direct object
I really appreciate how you have helped me with this project.I really appreciate your helping me with this project.
A complex problem I helped solve was when my friend was arguing with a girl .
The appointment of Paul Volcker to the Federal Reserve Board
In the sentence, "Earlier, I helped the principal." the verb is "helped."
No- Hope this helped!=) Another answer. I don' see anything wrong with saying, "It snowed yesterday." You could also say, "Yesterday, it snowed."
This phrasing is not flagrantly wrong, but not perfectly correct, either. You don't normally nurture someone into something, nurturing is not really transitive. You might instead say something like, "your nurturing helped me to succeed".
For ANY complex problem that was ever solved, somebody helped solve it.
Both sentences are grammatically correct. The first sentence, "The medicine helped stop the vomiting," uses the base form of the verb "stop." The second sentence, "The medicine helped to stop the vomiting," includes the infinitive form of the verb "to stop." Both convey the same meaning and are interchangeable.
The Chinese people kowtow to their gods.(:Hope this helped you. HAHA.. Cause it helped me when I found this sentence.