The former needs a subject, i.e. I did it yesterday. The latter requires a helping verb and a subject, i.e. I haddone it yesterday. With proper conjugation, they are both correct.
No, the phrase "it is well" is not grammatically correct. It seems to be missing a verb or adjective to complete the sentence. You could say "It is well done" to make it grammatically correct.
The verbs love and start do not agree, since they express actions that happened at different times; replacing start with started would fix the sentence.
Have done is correct. When using have as an auxiliary verb, it's paired with a past participle.
No. 'What did you do lately' is correct. The word 'did' puts the verb into the past, and it takes the infinitive form of the verb, not the past tense. 'What song did you sing yesterday?' NOT 'What song did you sang yesterday?' 'What did he eat this morning?' NOT 'What did he ate this morning?' 'Did they open the box?' NOT 'Did they opened the box?'
a masters.I have done a masters in English.But I think completed is a better verb than done and also add degree.I have completed a masters degree in English.
did is the past simple of do and is used with time words such as yesterdaydone is the past participle of do and is used with have/has/had.However have done /has done are not used with time words like yesterday.So 'You did it yesterday' is correctYou had done it yesterday could also be correct depending on the context.
No, the phrase "it is well" is not grammatically correct. It seems to be missing a verb or adjective to complete the sentence. You could say "It is well done" to make it grammatically correct.
I assume your question is if this sentence is correct. It's not. :( Correct: He swam across the lake yesterday. Example of "had swum": "Before the day of the race, I had swum two miles every day." "Had swum" (or "had done anything") shows the action happened before a past action or event.
The verbs love and start do not agree, since they express actions that happened at different times; replacing start with started would fix the sentence.
The correct version is"What you have done is wrong". In this form, "What" stands for "The thing that". The alternative "What have you done"... is a question.
Have done is correct. When using have as an auxiliary verb, it's paired with a past participle.
Yes! Is correct sentence
No, it's, "I wouldn't have done that."
yes
I loved my shop class , which started yesterday.(Note, it is all in the past tense, as it happened yesterday.)
No. Depending on the context of the sentence it should be If you have had a consultation or if you have done so, with consultation, blah blah
Yes. The correct way to say this is "you are done with this book."