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.............
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.
Dribble it. Pass it throw it. We want a basket.
yes
The definition of the word plot, in English, the order of events told in a story.
From what im told it means community
Please us porper English in the future.
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.
Neither. You would say "In school, we were told," or perhaps "When I was in school, I was told."
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."
It depends on what country you live in and what statement you are talking about.
NO! It would be, Why did you tell them? or if its more of a diologue "You told them? Why?" But why did you told them is incorrect.
"completez les phrases" = complete the sentences. ("completez" is a verb. A person or persons are being asked/told to complete the sentences)
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.
yes the tended to stay in america's largest cities. (i am not sure my histoy teacher told me that please correct if it's wrong)
When we where told that we had a grandson
I think you mean "When was your father born?"
Grammatically correct.