No, the majority of drivers involved in collisions do not necessarily have a good driving record. Accidents can happen to any driver, regardless of their past driving history. Factors such as road conditions, weather, and other external variables can also contribute to accidents.
The past tense is : I was sure you were driving well.
Yes, of course. Your entire work history for the past seven years must be disclosed, as well as any CDL driving job you've held in the past ten years.
Present continuous: He is driving. Past continuous: He was driving. Future continuous: He will be driving. Present perfect continuous: He has been driving. Past perfect continuous: He had been driving. Future perfect continuous: He will have been driving.
Because history is just that, history. It relates to the past and nobody likes living in the past.
Driving is the present participle of drive. "was driving" is the past continuous tense.
'Driving' can be used in any tense: I was driving, I am driving, I will be driving.====Also, remember, 'Driving' is not a verb. It is a gerund. 'Drive' and 'drove' are present and past tense verbs. In the above examples, 'was,' 'am' and '(will) be' are the verbs.
you question is weird do you mean in the past or what? because history is in the past
Finding cheap insurance isn't simple. It varies. Cheap rates can and will be determined by your past history I.E driving record. It is all about finding the best company that will offer you the best rate based on your history.
History means the past of something, whatever the topic is.
the past
A country's history can be made up by many things, some of which include past conflict, whether or not the country was ever a colony, and the government ideology in place.