what experiences have they gone thought
I have not gone backpacking with a guitar.
Newyear
The sentence "I have gone through" is correct. This construct is used to indicate a recent or ongoing action or experience that the speaker has personally undergone. "You had gone through" would be appropriate for describing a past action or experience that someone else has undergone.
I would say yes given that she has gone through puberty
You should just always be nice to them because you might not now what they are going through.
In the story "Mama's Gone," Mama is gone for an unspecified duration, but she is expected to return after a few days. The characters experience a mix of emotions during her absence, highlighting the impact of her departure on their lives. The exact timeline may vary depending on the context provided in the narrative.
because he culled from the top, those who had experience were gone.
To grieve means to experience intense sorrow, like if someone close to you dies. Grieved means that you have lost them and have come to the realisation that they are gone. Grief is the feeling with this. They are gone and you miss them terribly but there is nothing you can do and that's why you experience this feeling.
The word "experience" can be used as both a noun and a verb. As a noun, it refers to a particular event or activity that someone has gone through. As a verb, it means to undergo or participate in a certain event or activity.
Well, if your experience is anything like mine, your heater core is gone. Take it to the shop.
All of your experience will show through when you write. You write from a certain viewpoint which is created from everything you have gone through in your life.
She applied the term "lost generation" to those who had gone to war and survived because she believed that the experience of war had left them feeling disillusioned, disconnected, and without a sense of purpose or direction in life.