It depends on what you are trying to say. "Once you receive it" means that sometime in the future, you anticipate receiving the object. "Once you received it" means that you already have received it, and have acted at the point when you did receive it.
No. It has to be either, "Once I receive your documents I will fix a meeting" or "Once I have received your documents I will fix a meeting."
Neither of those are correct. Correct variations would be: "did not receive" "has not received" "had not received" Which you use will depend on the overall sentence you are trying to create.
"Has not come yet" is the correct one, but it is understandable why you would think that "has not came yet" might be correct. After all, for most verbs, the word after has or have is simply the past tense of the verb. For instance, the past tense of climb is climbed. Therefore, the past participle would be "has climbed." Since the past tense of come is came, it seems to make sense if the past participle is "has came." However, the word "come" belongs to a group of irregular verbs, so the conjugation of its past participle is different from how you would conjugate regular verbs in their past participles. This is one of those twisted exceptions in the English language that tends to confuse non-native speakers. has not come yet
The correct spelling is received (got, obtained). Follows the rule I before E except after C.
No, the sentence is not correct. The correct phrasing should be "we have yet to receive any reply from you." In this corrected version, "have yet to receive" is the appropriate verb tense to indicate that the action of receiving a reply has not yet occurred. The word "received" should be in the base form without the "-ed" ending.
No. It has to be either, "Once I receive your documents I will fix a meeting" or "Once I have received your documents I will fix a meeting."
Neither of those are correct. Correct variations would be: "did not receive" "has not received" "had not received" Which you use will depend on the overall sentence you are trying to create.
if in past... i am glad to ve received your email.
Yes, I will notify you once I have received the documents. Thank you.
The answer to this question is very simple. The answer is once, you may only receive Confirmation once.
1) I still haven't received any mail from you. 2) I have yet to receive any mail from you.
Once they have signed a contract or the player received a franchise tag
"Has not come yet" is the correct one, but it is understandable why you would think that "has not came yet" might be correct. After all, for most verbs, the word after has or have is simply the past tense of the verb. For instance, the past tense of climb is climbed. Therefore, the past participle would be "has climbed." Since the past tense of come is came, it seems to make sense if the past participle is "has came." However, the word "come" belongs to a group of irregular verbs, so the conjugation of its past participle is different from how you would conjugate regular verbs in their past participles. This is one of those twisted exceptions in the English language that tends to confuse non-native speakers. has not come yet
They can once they receive the Pharm.D and are licensed.They can once they receive the Pharm.D and are licensed.They can once they receive the Pharm.D and are licensed.They can once they receive the Pharm.D and are licensed.They can once they receive the Pharm.D and are licensed.They can once they receive the Pharm.D and are licensed.
The correct spelling is received (got, obtained). Follows the rule I before E except after C.
The correct spelling is B) receive.
The past tense of "receive" is "received." For example, "I received a package in the mail yesterday."