future tense
A hypothesis should: (1) be written in a declarative sentence; (2) be written in present tense; (3) contain the population; (4) contain the variables; (5) reflect the problem or purpose statement; and (6) be empirically testable.
1.the beby is crying. 2.the bird is flying. 3.the janitor is cleaned the yard. 4.the boy is handsome. 5.the girl is cute.
Simple sentences have a subject and verb. I walked home. (with object) I cried endlessly. (with adverb) She sang "America the Beautiful". (with object) He whistled perfectly. (with adverb) I raced to school. (with object)
We were very tired after we had made 5 laps of the pitch.
5 equivocal term
I will be going home at 5 o'clock.They are planning to come to my house next weekend.
The five progressive tenses in English are: present progressive (e.g., I am eating), past progressive (e.g., She was watching), future progressive (e.g., They will be sleeping), present perfect progressive (e.g., We have been studying), and past perfect progressive (e.g., He had been working).
1. Past tense 2. Present tense 3. Future tense 4. Past perfect tense 5. Present perfect tense 6. Future perfect tense
1)Simple Present Tense, 2)Simple Past Tense, 3)Simple Future Tense, 4)Present Continuous Tense, 5)Past Continuous Tense, 6)Future Continuous Tense, 7)Presnt Perfect Tense, 8)Past Perfect Tense, 9)Future Perfect Tense, 10)Present Perfect Continuous Tense, 11)Past Perfect Continuous Tense, 12)Future Perfect Continuous Tense.
I run every morning. She sings beautifully. We eat dinner at 6 pm. They play soccer on weekends. He reads novels before bed.
Have is present tense, and had is past tense. For example, I have 5 dollars. I then buy a sandwich for 5 dollars. Therefore, I had 5 dollars, but spent it on a sandwich.
5 example each and use them in a sentence
Yes. In proper English, to create the "if-then" conditional sentence, you need one of the below combinations. The conditional tense (would x) can only be used in the "then" part of any conditional sentence. 1) If future tense, then future tense: Typically used for two long off events that are strongly related. This conditional pairing is rare. Ex. If the cylinders will lock, then the dam will burst. 2) If present tense, then present tense: Typically used for habitual events. Ex. If I have homework, then I do not play with my friends after school. 3) If present tense, then future tense: Typically used for a singular event in the future that is dependent on some intermediary event. Ex. If it rains, I will not go to the movies. 4) If past tense, then conditional: Typically used to state a counterfactual in the recent past or present. Ex. If it rained, I would stay inside. (It did not rain and therefore he did not stay inside.) 5) If pluperfect, then conditional perfect: Typically used to state a counterfactual in the non-recent past. Ex. Had I done my homework, I would not have failed all of my classes. (I did not do my homework and thus I failed all of my classes.)
It would be impossible to put 5 similies into one sentence.
what is the answer
She has eaten dinner already. They have traveled to Europe multiple times. He has finished his homework for the day. We have seen that movie before. The project has been completed ahead of schedule.
yes you can example: the teacher said what is 5+5?