You have told me that it is correct?
The correct form is "You have told," which is the present perfect tense indicating that the action of telling occurred at an unspecified time in the past with a connection to the present. "Are you had told" is grammatically incorrect.
The correct phrasing would be: "Why did you tell them?" The verb "tell" should be in the past tense form "told" in this construction.
It would be "he told" if you are using simple past tense. As in: "He told me his name was Bob." Or "he had told" if you want the past perfect tense. As in: "He had told her to lock the door before he went to work."
Yes, both "I had told you" and "I had told him" are correct past perfect tense constructions. The use of "had" indicates that the action of telling occurred before another past action. "I had told you" refers to something you had mentioned to someone, while "I had told him" refers to something you had mentioned to another person.
" John told us that him and Scott were playing at his house."No, the sentence is not correct. The personal pronoun 'him' is the objective form used as the subject of the verb 'were playing'.The correct subjective pronoun is: "John told us that he and Scott were playing at his house."
No, the correct sentence would be: "He told us they were going to do it." This is because the reporting verb "told" is in the past tense, so the verb "are" should be transformed to the past tense "were" as well.
The correct phrasing would be: "Why did you tell them?" The verb "tell" should be in the past tense form "told" in this construction.
There is really no telling if generalization is correct. It is told that generalization is never correct and some has told that generalization is sometime correct so it depends on a person opinion.
When we where told that we had a grandson
Grammatically correct.
He told us a hard luck story. This is a correct sentence if you capitalize the first letter.
" John told us that him and Scott were playing at his house."No, the sentence is not correct. The personal pronoun 'him' is the objective form used as the subject of the verb 'were playing'.The correct subjective pronoun is: "John told us that he and Scott were playing at his house."
The noun or pronoun for the blank space is objective, direct object of the verb 'told' (...when she told John and me... or ...when she told us...).John and me is the compound objective case.
Both are correct. Both are parts of sentence in reported speech. In reported speech it is ok not to use 'that'. He told you that if you come you will have to work hard. He told you if you come you will have to work hard. These sentences are also conditional sentences - if..............will.............
yes
No, the correct sentence would be: "He told us they were going to do it." This is because the reporting verb "told" is in the past tense, so the verb "are" should be transformed to the past tense "were" as well.
It would be "he told" if you are using simple past tense. As in: "He told me his name was Bob." Or "he had told" if you want the past perfect tense. As in: "He had told her to lock the door before he went to work."
YES, YOU ARE CORRECT