You/I didn't come.
"She didn't come" is the correct way of saying this. You could say "She never came" or "She didn't want to come" or "It was her fault she didn't come and nothing to do with me" or "It doesn't matter whether she came or not" After a form of 'to do' you always say the infinite vrom of the verb
Watashi WA (location you came from) kara desu. (for female speakers) Boku WA (location you came from) kara desu. (for male speakers)
It depends on what you are trying to say. Both can be correct. Here are two examples: I just came tonight, because a friend was here. I just come to the club on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
The past form of come is came.
Came is the past tense verb of come.
never hahaha! because we are in new year and they say that its comming out in january 2011 but they delayed to Xmas 2011 and it didnt came out
didnt really come from somewhere, came from buddah a way to reach nirvana.
Football didnt have any sport come from it however, Football came from a sport known as rugby.
no it didnt ,sydney white came first.
They didnt come to Canada because obviously they still live in Germany!
We Came is past tense. We will come is future tense. We are going is present.
"She didn't come" is the correct way of saying this. You could say "She never came" or "She didn't want to come" or "It was her fault she didn't come and nothing to do with me" or "It doesn't matter whether she came or not" After a form of 'to do' you always say the infinite vrom of the verb
20 PEOPLE CAME OUT they didnt say anything about animals!
Most books say they come the Chinese. Most books say they came from the Chinese Most books have said that they came from china.
minecraft didnt say anything yet about it coming out on diffrent consoles
* All i can say is that sewing came from the United Kingdom * All i can say is that sewing came from the United Kingdom
You should say "they haven't come yet." The verb "come" is the correct past participle to use with "have," so the proper construction is "haven't come." Using "came" would be incorrect in this context.