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Yesterday can be translated into Kikuyu language as ira.
"Yesterday" can be an adverb, a noun, or an adjective.ExamplesAdverb: We arrived yesterday.Noun: Yesterday started well. All our yesterdays.Adjective: Yesterday morning
It could be: ''I had seen him twice yesterday, and he looked perfectly healthy; therefore, I was very surprised this morning to hear that he had died.''
No. 'What did you do lately' is correct. The word 'did' puts the verb into the past, and it takes the infinitive form of the verb, not the past tense. 'What song did you sing yesterday?' NOT 'What song did you sang yesterday?' 'What did he eat this morning?' NOT 'What did he ate this morning?' 'Did they open the box?' NOT 'Did they opened the box?'
Yesterday = Ontem - The day before yesterday = Anteontem
about 7 oclock this morning
No, the noun phrase 'yesterday morning' is a common noun, a general word for any yesterday morning at anytime.
in mod 12 which is the same as clock time... 6 oclock plus seven = 1 oclock
2 oclock in the morning
That's military speak for 5 oclock in the morning
Yesterday can be translated into Kikuyu language as ira.
pester her every day at 1 oclock in the morning
A bomb is dropped on Nagasaki, Japan
The day that is today ended yesterday and started this morning.
yesterday morning at 7.00
change your clock to 2 oclock in the morning and play three games
Your sentence reads: Mom's angry yesterday morning. Mom's is a contraction for Mom is. So the sentence could read: Mom is angry yesterday morning. The verb is involves the present and only the present. Your mom might be mad right now. You might say: Mom is angry right now. That is the proper use of the word is. There is no way you can be mad yesterday morning right now. Pigs can not fly. Either Mom was angry yesterday morning or Mom is angry right now.