he sent me a not from hamilton bermuda (change the sentence into simple present tense)
Answers
Answered by
0
Correct Question:
He sent me a note from hamilton Bermuda.
(change the sentence into simple present tense)
Answer:
He sends me a note from hamilton Bermuda.
Explanation:
- Tenses are the forms of a verb that are preferred to show the time frame of the action expressed by the action word (verb).
- The present tense is used to talk about the present and to talk about the recent/ upcoming future.
- The structures for Simple Present Tense go like this-
- Subject(I/You/We/They) + Base Form of the Verb(V1) i.e. Subject(He/She/It) + Base form of the verb(V1) – s/es
- We use simple present tense in
- 1. repeated actions
- 2. universal truth
- 3. scheduled/fixed events
- 4. Sequence of actions in the present
- 5. With a special verb and single words
- For the verb in past indefinite-sent, the root verb/base form is "send" and its simple present indefinite will be- sends (He/she,s/es)
Thus, the given sentence can be transformed into simple present tense by following the structure rules as-
He sends me a note from hamilton Bermuda.
#SPJ3
Answered by
0
Answer:
He sends me a note from hamilton Bermuda.
Explanation:
- Simple present tense sentences denote a habit, a universal fact, or an experience.
- The simple present tense indicates the presence of an action. In general, it is used for factual or habitual actions - things that happen in the present but not necessarily now.
- When the Third Person is Singular, the sentence begins with He, She, Common noun or proper noun, then a verb in its base form with added's' or 'es' according to the verb, followed by an object, which is optional.
- So, for Third Person Singular, the formula for simple present tense is as follows -
- He/ She/ Common Nouns/ Proper Nouns + verb (base form) with s/es at the end + object (optional)
RULES :
- In the present simple 3rd person singular (he, she, it), add s, es, or ies to the base form of the verb.
- Simply add a s to regular verbs, such as cook>cooks, play>plays, and play >plays.
- Add an es to verbs ending in s, ss, sh, ch, x, and o. For example, wash > washes, mix > mixes, go >goes.
- Change the y to I and add es to verbs that end in y after a consonant (any letter that isn't a vowel). For example, study > studies, fly > flies.
#SPJ2
Similar questions