The correct sentence is: Rita will understand if you arrive late. The verb "arrive" is in the simple present tense, indicating a future event.
She completed her assignment yesterday. They went to the store earlier this morning. He finished reading the book last night. The game ended before I arrived.
The conjunction "yet" is being used as an adversative conjunction in the sentence. It shows a contrast or contradiction between arriving early and not finding a seat.
You say "you arrived at the restaurant." The preposition "at" is used to show the location where you arrived.
The correct phrase is "arrived for her." In this case, "her" is the objective pronoun that should be used after the preposition "for."
"Has arrived" is the verb phrase in the given sentence "Has your brother arrived yet".
Because The verb shows you an action or a state of being -- run, love The verb shows you when something was/is done -- in the past, in the future The verb can show you if something is a habit or true now -- She lives in China The verb can show the sequence of actions -- She had gone when I arrived Every sentences needs a verb
I dont quite understand what you are asking. Grow up.
She completed her assignment yesterday. They went to the store earlier this morning. He finished reading the book last night. The game ended before I arrived.
The answer depends on how you arrived at this sequence. For example, if these numbers represent the function f(x) = 4x³ - 6x² + 7x + 2, for x = 0, 1, 2, and 3, respectively, then, f(4) = 190, the next number in your sequence. Take note, however, that there are infinite choices of function that could reproduce the same sequence, to a given number of terms.
'have arrived' or 'has arrived' I have arrived you have arrived (singular) he, she or it has arrived we have arrived you have arrived (plural) they have arrived Examples are: My parents have just arrived from Australia. Whoopee, they've arrived.
The conjunction "yet" is being used as an adversative conjunction in the sentence. It shows a contrast or contradiction between arriving early and not finding a seat.
Linguistically speaking, the term arrived as most do, with the evolution of language. Society and culture alters language to make it easier to understand. The term was most likely to originate from saying "we will set a date for the meeting" (be it romantic or otherwise) or similar sentences. This would have through the years been cut down simply to be your date to accommodate in society's increasingly informal attitudes to social situations.
The verb of arrival is arrive.Other verbs depending on the tense are arrives, arriving and arrived.Some example sentences are:"I will arrive in two hours"."She arrives soon"."We will be arriving later"."The package of tea has arrived".
The grammar problem is that you have two sentences. Also, the adverb "now" modifies the verb doubt. It should precede it. "You now doubt that Henry will come tonight. The last train from Boston arrived several hours ago."
He arrived with dignity. He arrived, this time with dignity. He arrived, it was with dignity.
You say "you arrived at the restaurant." The preposition "at" is used to show the location where you arrived.
The correct phrase is "arrived for her." In this case, "her" is the objective pronoun that should be used after the preposition "for."