English, asked by rajeshbandi992, 6 months ago

All formulas of change the voice.​

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Answered by InstaPrince
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Identify different types of present tenses. The present tense describes action being done in the present moment—not future, not past, and not a hypothetical action. The English language has a simple present tense, a present continuous tense, a present perfect tense, and present perfect continuous tense.[1] All indicate action in the present, but differ in their descriptions of how long the action has been taking place.

Simple present tense combines a subject + verb. For example: “He writes.”

Present continues tense combines a subject + being verb (am, is , are) + verb1 + ing. For Example: “He is writing.”

Present perfect tense combines a subject + have/has + verb. For example: “He has written.”

Present perfect continuous tense combines subject + has/have + been + verb + ing. Example: “He has been writing.”

Identify different past tenses. Just as English has multiple present tenses, the language also possesses multiple past tenses. English has a simple past tense, as well as past perfect, past continuous, and past perfect continuous tenses.[2] All past-tense sentences describe something that has already occurred.

Simple past tense combines a subject + verb in the sentence. For example: “He wrote.”

Past perfect tense combines the subject + had + verb. For example: “He had written.”

Past continuous tense combines a subject + being verb (was, were) + verb + ing. For example: “He was writing.”

Past perfect continuous tense combines subject + had + been + verb + ing. For example: “He had been writing.”

Identify future tenses. Like present and past tenses, English has multiple forms of the future tense. Each version indicates an action that has not yet occurred—but will occur in the future—and the distinctions between different types of future tense signify the completion or incompletion of the future act.[3]

Simple future tense combines a subject + “will” + verb. For example, “He will write.”

Future perfect tense combines the subject + “will have” + verb. For example, “He will have written.”

Future continuous tense combines a subject + “will” + being verb + verb. For example, “He will be writing.”

Future perfect continuous tense combines the subject + “have been” + verb + “ing.” For example, “He will have been writing.”

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