English, asked by deepak931251, 10 months ago

I ........ for her since(wait)noon but she .........as yet.(not come)​

Answers

Answered by Shriyakurup
1

Answer:

I am waiting for her since noon but she has not come yet

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Answered by monica789412
0

The correct answer is: I have waited for her since noon, but she has not come yet.

Filling in the blanks using the correct tense:

  • We have to fill in the blanks with the right tense form of the verbs given.
  • For this, we must find out clues from the given sentence.
  • In the sentence we see the words 'noon' and 'yet'. So it means the waiting had be done recently.
  • When we talk of an incident that happened very recently, we must use present perfect tense.
  • As we have 'since' used, both the clauses should be of the same tense.
  • The present perfect tense of 'wait' is 'have waited' for the subject 'I'; and the present perfect tense of 'not come' is 'has not come' for the subject 'she'.
  • So the answer is: I have waited for her since noon, but she has not come yet.
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