Users questions

Is I have read correct?

Is I have read correct?

While both are correct there is a small difference in the meaning. “I have read this letter today” sounds as though the letter has already been read, so is in the past tense. “I read this letter today” sounds as though the letter is being read at the moment or will be read in the near future.

What is the meaning of I have read?

“I have read the book.” meaning the present moment the book has been completed by me and if needed I may read the book again and again until I get the complete information from the book.

Have read or had read?

Had read in this case is the past perfect tense, indicating that the event happened before something else in the past (unstated in this case – not sure the sentence is technically correct). Have read is the present perfect tense, indicating you read the stories before now.

What is the perfect tense of write?

Verb Tenses

past present
simple He wrote He writes
continuous He was writing He is writing
perfect He had written He has written
perfect continuous He had been writing He has been writing

What is a gerund subject?

A gerund is a noun made from a verb root plus ing (a present participle). A whole gerund phrase functions in a sentence just like a noun, and can act as a subject, an object, or a predicate nominative. The verb is, a form of the linking verb to be, is followed by reading, which renames the subject my passion.

How do you tell if a gerund is a subject?

Lesson Summary A gerund phrase can be a subject, subject complement, direct object, indirect object, or object of a preposition. To find gerund phrases, first look for the verb ending in ‘-ing’ then determine if it is acting as a noun or if it is a present participle showing continuing action.

How do you distinguish between gerund and infinitive?

Gerunds and infinitives can replace a noun in a sentence. Gerund = the present participle (-ing) form of the verb, e.g., singing, dancing, running. Infinitive = to + the base form of the verb, e.g., to sing, to dance, to run. Whether you use a gerund or an infinitive depends on the main verb in the sentence.

How do you form a gerund?

A gerund is an instance when a verb is being used in a very particular way – as a noun! You do this by changing the infinitive form of the verb, and adding “ing” at the end. For example, “eat” is changed to “eating”, or “write” is changed to “writing”.

How do you use gerunds?

You use the ing form after some verbs such as enjoy, admit, appreciate, can’t stand / help / bear, deny, avoid, mind, understand, consider, finish, imagine and resent. For example, “I can’t stand doing nothing”, or “She denied breaking the copier”. With other verbs, use the gerund after a preposition.