No.
"I could have gone with you if I had known your schedule."
Or
"If I had known your schedule, I could have gone with you."
Your verb tenses are incorrect in the original, and you need to use "if" to set up the condition.
The correct way to phrase this sentence is: "If I knew your schedule, I could go with you." This restructuring maintains the conditional form "if... then" that is needed for this context.
The correct phrasing should be, "I didn't know that." The past tense of "know" is "knew," so using "knew" in this context would be incorrect.
Could be "know, knows" but also the simpler "knew, knew" or even the perfect tense "had known, knew" -- the tense is so undefined that you would have to choose from a number of distractors.
The correct form is "I didn't know" because "knew" is the past tense of "know," while "know" should be used after the auxiliary verb "did" to form the past tense in this construction. The correct construction uses the base form "know" after the auxiliary verb "did" to indicate the past negation of knowing something.
The correct phrase is "have known." "Known" is the past participle form of the verb "know" and is used with the auxiliary verb "have" to indicate a completed action in the past.
"Yo savia" is not correct Spanish. It seems to be a misspelling of "yo sabía," which translates to "I knew" in English.
The correct phrase is "have known." "Known" is the past participle form of the verb "know" and is used with the auxiliary verb "have" to indicate a completed action in the past.
No, the correct phrase is "he knew winter was coming." The word "had" is unnecessary in this sentence.
She knew the correct answer was 5, but she didn't care.
It Must Be "I Knew About This Long Ago".
Could be "know, knows" but also the simpler "knew, knew" or even the perfect tense "had known, knew" -- the tense is so undefined that you would have to choose from a number of distractors.
Yes, that is correct.
I knew you could bake a potato...
That is the correct spelling of the phrase "I knew that" -- synonyms for known are understood, comprehended, and recognized.
You can but that might start problems but you could let her know that what she did was not right (if she knew about you)
It's not completely correct. Since the sentence is referring to the past, the correct way to say it is "I knew that the plane would crash." And all sentences have to start with a capital letter.
Were. The subject of this sentence is plural (we) so the verb should be a plural verb, also the other verb (knew) is past tense. The past plural form of are is were. -- We knew we were in trouble.
The correct form and spelling: I didn't know.