Would have run is grammatically correct
The correct grammar for the sentence is: "She wished she had run instead of marrying him." This sentence is in past perfect tense, with "had run" and "marrying" being the correct verb forms.
Neither: RAN (the second form of a verb is its Past Tense); as for your suggestions, only HAS RUN is correct, but it's a Present Perfect (you use the auxiliary HAVE + the third form = the Past Particle of the respective verb).
"Is run" is correct. "Is ran" is not grammatically correct.
the first one
To command someone to run in Spanish, you would say "Corre."
The correct English grammar would be 'I should have run'.
The proper grammar is "report was run."
No, it would be that the rivers flowed over, or had flowed over (their banks). I've long wondered why it is that rivers always run, they never walk or stroll.
The correct grammar for the sentence is: "She wished she had run instead of marrying him." This sentence is in past perfect tense, with "had run" and "marrying" being the correct verb forms.
In grammar conjugate means to list the different forms of a verb. An example would be the word run - it would be conjugated by saying "I run, you run, he runs, she runs, they run, we run."
In the world of technology, where a script is a snippet or more of computer code, the proper grammar is: The script was run, or the script ran.
Certainly. If one were to make a comparison saying "He can run as quick as a cheetah" then it would be grammatically correct.
The sentence 'Head off to the airport to meet with somebody to ship out this stuff to Australia' is not correct grammar because it is a run on sentence.
To correct a run-on sentence, you can split it up into smaller sentences, insert commas, or insert semicolons. Basically, add grammar and take out anything that is unnecessary to the sentence.
Back in the days before computers, the only way to check that a sentence was correct was to refer to a grammar textbook. Now, of course, a sentence can be run through your word processing program's grammar, or through a more thorough professional online grammar checker.
You would have come is correct. This is an example of a past participle that is different from the past tense. People often use the past tense instead, but that is incorrect. Other examples of irregular past participles are run (he had run), gone (we had gone), and drunk (I had drunk).
Neither: RAN (the second form of a verb is its Past Tense); as for your suggestions, only HAS RUN is correct, but it's a Present Perfect (you use the auxiliary HAVE + the third form = the Past Particle of the respective verb).