Yes, for the past perfect. "He had sent the letter."
"Will be sent" is correct. It follows the correct passive voice construction with the past participle "sent" after the auxiliary verb "will be".
"Have it sent" is the correct form in standard English.
"Have sent" is correct. "Have sent" is the past participle form of the verb "send" used in present perfect tense.
"I was sent the present" is correct, passive but correct. The first sentence needs "to" before "me" to be correct--"The present was sent to me."To make the sentence active, identify who sent the present. For example, "Billy Bob sent the present to me."
The correct phrase is "you have sent." "Sent" is the past participle form of the verb "send" when used in perfect tenses like the present perfect.
"Will be sent" is correct. It follows the correct passive voice construction with the past participle "sent" after the auxiliary verb "will be".
"Have it sent" is the correct form in standard English.
"Two of them have sent" is correct usage.
"Have sent" is correct. "Have sent" is the past participle form of the verb "send" used in present perfect tense.
"I was sent the present" is correct, passive but correct. The first sentence needs "to" before "me" to be correct--"The present was sent to me."To make the sentence active, identify who sent the present. For example, "Billy Bob sent the present to me."
The correct phrase is "you have sent." "Sent" is the past participle form of the verb "send" when used in perfect tenses like the present perfect.
Both are correct, the only difference is that "has sent" is in present tense and "had sent" is in past tense.e.g. Mike has sent me a letter. (present tense)Mike had sent me a letter. (past tense)
Yes, it is correct. You are correct to use "who" and not "whom" because "who" is the subject of the clause "who has sent him."
It would be correct if you would've said, "All of them have sent a response," or, "All of them have sent responses."
I have sent, he/she has sent, we have sent, they have sent.
No, the correct term is "sent".
The correct phrase is "mail you had sent earlier." "Sent" is the past participle form of the verb, and it is used with forms of "have" when forming the past perfect tense.