have you ever viisited the doctor write your reason for visit?
Answers
Answer:
CORRECT — “I visited my doctor yesterday.” (contributed by Saad Saleh)
THIS ONE IS CORRECT! Congratulations! It uses a simple past tense with a specific time indicator (“yesterday”).
CORRECT — “I had visited my doctor yesterday.” (contributed by Saad Saleh)
THIS ONE IS CORRECT! Congratulations! It uses the past perfect tense. However, you might want to add more information, e.g., “I had visited my doctor yesterday before I realized how serious my condition really was.”
WRONG — “I have visited my doctor yesterday.” (contributed by Saad Saleh)
You cannot use “yesterday” with a verb in the present perfect tense. It should be just “I visited my doctor yesterday” (simple past tense) or “I have visited my doctor” (present perfect tense minus “yesterday”).
WRONG — “We have seen the doctor yesterday.” (contributed by M Anonymous)
This would have been perfect except for the word “yesterday,” which must be deleted, because you used the present perfect tense instead of the simple past tense.
When you use the present perfect tense (“have seen”), you should just say, “We have seen the doctor.” without any past time indicator (e.g., “yesterday”).
However, if you want to use “yesterday” (or any other past-time indicator), you should change the tense to either the simple past tense or the past perfect tense (e.g., “We saw the doctor yesterday” or “We had seen the doctor yesterday”).
VERY WRONG — “Do we have seen the doctor.” (contributed by M Anonymous)
This one has multiple issues in addition to not being able to decide whether it is a question or a statement. (Starting the sentence with “Do” makes it seem like a question, but the rest of it does not work as either a declarative sentence or a question.)
You cannot use two auxiliary verbs (“do” and “have”) together.
If it is a question in the present perfect tense, it could be “Have we seen the doctor?” Note that, for questions, the subject (“we”) comes between the auxiliary verb (“have”) and the main verb (“seen”).
If it is a declarative statement in the present perfect tense, it could be “We have seen the doctor.”
If it is a declarative statement in the past tense, it could be “We did see the doctor” or “We saw the doctor.”
Explanation:
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