Yes/no questions with have or has:
Have you seen Mike? Has mike phoned you? Haven't you talked to Mike? Hasn't Mike written to you
Questions with question words:
Where have you been?
Who have you talked too?
What have you done?
Present perfect is often used to talk about experiences, actions that have happened in the past but have a connection to the present. Questions using present perfect may ask about unfinished actions, recent events, or experiences that have influenced the present situation.
It has auxiliary verbs before present participle (-ing form of a verb).Examples with jumping as the present participle:The past perfect progressive is formed with had + been + jumping. I/we/you/he/she/it had been jumping.The present perfect progressive is formed with has/have + been + jumping. I/we/you/they have been jumping, he/she has been jumping.The future perfect progressive is formed with will + have + been + jumping. I/we/you/he/she/they will have been jumping.
It depends on what kind of question eg:present simple - Where do you live. verb do = the base form.past simple - Where did you live last year. verb is did = past tense form of do.present continuous - What are you doing after lunch. verb is doing = present participle form of do.present perfect - What have you done with the keys. verb is done = past participle form of do.For yes/no questions the verb could be a be verb - Areyou happy. verb is are = plural present form of be.(I have not put question marks in the questions because sometime wiki answers does not like answers with questions in them).
"Sent" is the past participle form of the verb "send." It can be used in various tenses, including the present perfect ("I have sent the email") and the past perfect ("She had already sent the package").
Adjectives answer the questions: "What kind?", "Which one?", and "How many?" about the words they modify.
She has visited Paris three times. We have just finished our project for school. He has not eaten breakfast yet. Have you ever traveled to Japan?
It is the present perfect tense.
Present perfect tense.
It depends on what kind of question eg:present simple - Where do you live. verb do = the base form.past simple - Where did you live last year. verb is did = past tense form of do.present continuous - What are you doing after lunch. verb is doing = present participle form of do.present perfect - What have you done with the keys. verb is done = past participle form of do.For yes/no questions the verb could be a be verb - Areyou happy. verb is are = plural present form of be.(I have not put question marks in the questions because sometime wiki answers does not like answers with questions in them).
I am a full of questions kind of person. Perfect for this!!!!! This is why I really want to become a member of WikiAnswers community.
It has auxiliary verbs before present participle (-ing form of a verb).Examples with jumping as the present participle:The past perfect progressive is formed with had + been + jumping. I/we/you/he/she/it had been jumping.The present perfect progressive is formed with has/have + been + jumping. I/we/you/they have been jumping, he/she has been jumping.The future perfect progressive is formed with will + have + been + jumping. I/we/you/he/she/they will have been jumping.
A Crooked Kind of Perfect was created in 2007.
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There are many people answering the questions on this site. Some are scholars, some are not. It is a wiki, which basically means that anyone can come and ask or answer questions on the site. Kind of a collaborative community, trying to answer each other's questions.
Adjectives answer these four questions: Which one? What kind? How much? Whose?
There is nothing more perfect than perfect, hence, there is no superlative for perfect. Same goes for 'unique'. It means, "One of a kind", and you cannot get more 'one of a kind' than 'one of a kind'. No superlative for 'unique', either.
retorical questions
Testable questions.