there was 300 men and when they got to buchenwald there was only 254 men.
The train had left when I arrived at the station. had left arrived
You use past perfect to talk about one event that happened in the past before another event in the past.Past perfect is had + past participle.The train had left when I arrived at the station.I arrived at the station is something that happened in the past (past simple).The train had left (past perfect) is the thing that happened before I arrived.
This is not one tense but the combination of two tenses. Past perfect and past simple are used to show an action in the past that happened before another past action.I arrived at the station. -- past simpleThe train had left. -- past perfectWhen I arrived at the station the train had left.
If I had known you would ask this question, I would have studied English grammar more. In the previous sentences, "had known" is in the past perfect tense.Past perfect is used to show one thing in the past happened before another thing in the past. This other thing in the past is usually expressed by past simple. egThe train had left when I arrived at the station.Had left is past perfect and this event happened before arrived which is past simple.So you would use past perfect when telling a story about things in the past. egI felt really tired when I took the train to work yesterday because Sophie and I had been to a party the night before. We hadn't gone to bed until 3:00am. I had been on the train 5 minutes when I realised that I had left my wallet at home. I phoned Sophie but she had already left for work.
They have survived the first winter. There were only 4 women left of the 104 colonist who arrived left to cook the dinner.
that would depend upon who 'they' were.
The train had left when I arrived at the station. had left arrived
You use past perfect to talk about one event that happened in the past before another event in the past.Past perfect is had + past participle.The train had left when I arrived at the station.I arrived at the station is something that happened in the past (past simple).The train had left (past perfect) is the thing that happened before I arrived.
Yes she left school at 16 and started to work in a care home and started to train as a nurse but then decided this was not the path she wanted to take in life.
This is not one tense but the combination of two tenses. Past perfect and past simple are used to show an action in the past that happened before another past action.I arrived at the station. -- past simpleThe train had left. -- past perfectWhen I arrived at the station the train had left.
Past simple has only one verb and that is in past tense. eg I arrived at the station. - arrived is past verb.Past perfect has two verbs one is had - the past of have, and the other is a past participle. eg The train had left. - left is the past participle of leave.Past simple and past perfect are often used together. The past perfect verb shows an action that happened in the past before another action (past simple) that happened in the past egThe train had left when I arrived at the station.
Past simple has only one verb and that is in past tense. eg I arrived at the station. - arrived is past verb.Past perfect has two verbs one is had - the past of have, and the other is a past participle. eg The train had left. - left is the past participle of leave.Past simple and past perfect are often used together. The past perfect verb shows an action that happened in the past before another action (past simple) that happened in the past egThe train had left when I arrived at the station.
No, the correct phrasing would be "When 'you' arrived, she had already left." By adding the comma after "arrived," the sentence is clearer and reads more smoothly.
no difference
an antonym for the word arrive is disappear
Past perfect is used to show one thing in the past happened before another thing in the past. This other thing in the past is usually expressed by past simple. egThe train had left when I arrived at the station.Had left is past perfect and this event happened before arrived which is past simple.So you would use past perfect when telling a story about things in the past. egI felt really tired when I took the train to work yesterday because Sophie and I had been to a party the night before. We hadn't gone to bed until 3:00am. I had been on the train 5 minutes when I realised that I had left my wallet at home. I phoned Sophie but she had already left for work.
It was when they left the train at Birkenau. They left their cherished objects and illusions behind on the train.