To Vote and the right to be a first class citizen. Also the right to work in factories.
the past has been, the future will be done. do we really need to know the past to know the future? If we knew the exact date of Christopher Columbus would that change the future? You don't know what matters from the past enough to know how it will affect the future.
Won is the past tense and past participle of the verb win.
The word worthy is an adjective. In the English languague, only verbs have a past tense. Adjectives don't. So whether you are saying I am worthy, or I was worthy, or I am going to be worthy, or I should have been worthy, the word worthy does not change.
The past tense and past participle are both ground.
It depends on what you are trying to convey.Examples:He was tired because he was exercising so hard. This sentence emphasizes that he was tired because he was exercising at that exact moment.He was tired because he had been exercising so hard. This sentence emphasizes that he was tired because he had been exercising over a period of time. It is possible that he was still exercising at that moment OR that he had just finished.They both have similar usesPast perfect is used to talk about one thing that happened in the past before another thing that happened in the past.The train had left the station when I arrived - had left is past perfect. The second thing that happened is often expressed in past simple.Past perfect continuous/progressive is used to talk about something that happened for for a period of time (before the second thing happened).It had been raining before he crashed his car.
Women were denied in the past because it was believed that they were not as intelligent as men. This is because women were not allowed to have the same educations as a man. Nowadays, women should not be denied just for being females because that is considered discrimination. It does still happen, but it is against the law.
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Both women and racial minorities have been suppressed, sometimes through laws, sometimes in spite of the law. These two rights movements are attempts to overcome the past and get full rights.
infinitive: deny past: denied past participle: denied
To Deny something, or someones rights. To Deny an act. Deny, or Denys( present) Denied (past) Example: Erik broke the door, but he Denied that he did it... "you can not Deny the fact that I am telling the truth" You can't Deny my rights ( privilege )
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Looker on. has written: 'Plain truths, and correct statements of facts' -- subject(s): History 'Women's rights as preached by women past and present' -- subject(s): Social conditions, Women's rights, Women
Denied
Denial is a noun. The verb is deny. The past is denied.
The past participle of the verb to deny is denied.
Denied is a verb. It's the past tense and past participle of deny.
People with disabilities have often faced discrimination, exclusion, and stigmatization in the past. They were frequently institutionalized, segregated from society, and denied equal opportunities in education, employment, and other areas. Attitudes towards disabilities have only started to shift in recent decades with the rise of disability rights movements advocating for inclusion and accessibility.