English, asked by arunkumar1111962, 1 day ago

An old friend of mine recognised me but I _________ ( not recognize ) him
(A) recognizes
(b) recognize
(C) did not recognize
(d) was not recognizing

Answers

Answered by jyotihiwal
6

Answer:

c) did not recognise

Explanation:

An old friend of mine recognised me but I did not recognise him.

Answered by crkavya123
0

Answer:

An old friend of mine recognized me but I did not recognize him

Explanation:

Simple past tense

Did is mainly used in questions and negatives in the simple past tense. ‘Did you meet Mohan yesterday?’ ‘No, I didn’t.’ ‘Did he commit suicide?’ ‘Yes, he did.’

The fundamental past tense in Modern English is the simple past, often known as the past simple, past indefinite, or preterite. Despite having various other purposes, its primary function is to narrate previous occurrences. There are a few hundred irregular verbs with several forms, whereas ordinary English verbs produce the simple past in -ed.

The term "simple" is used to distinguish between past tense forms that require auxiliaries in conjunction with participles, such as the past perfect and past progressive, and those whose fundamental form uses the simple past tense alone.

Most verbs only have one simple past tense, regardless of the subject's person or number (there is no addition of -s for the third person singular as in the simple present). However, there are two past tense variations for the copula verb be: was for the first and third person singular and were in other contexts. In conditional clauses and similar structures, the term was can also be used in place of was; for more details, see the English subjunctive. Only in this instance does contemporary English distinguish between the usage of the auxiliary did in emphatic forms of the simple past, inversion, and negations with not.

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