English, asked by santoshdavi010, 4 days ago

"I have not eaten anything since morning," the old ​men saying

Answers

Answered by OoJii20
0

Answer:

mark me as a brainleast

Explanation:

The context you're likely to often hear negative present perfect progressive in is probably something like saying lately you don't do something habitually as much as you did before (haven't been doing something as much as before), or haven't been doing something recently that you should be doing or maybe expect yourself to be doing.

"Lately I haven't been talking to my friends as much as I used to."

"I haven't been exercising like I'm supposed to."

"I heard you haven't been going to work very much lately."

"Your teacher says you haven't been paying much attention in class."

(not a teacher, just a language lover

Answered by 146799
0

Answer:

what we have to do? we have to change this in indirect speech?

Explanation:

It could be= the old man said he had not eaten anything since morning

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