mohan i will not tell to you because you are not belongs to our
Answers
Answer:
Mohan go out for a walk." ~ This is a command, ordering Mohan to go out for a walk.
"Mohan went out for a walk." ~ This is a statement of a past event, Mohan has previously gone out for a walk.
Either is “correct” depending on what you are saying. Are you ordering Mohan to go out for a walk; or are you stating that he has already done so?
The many other variations of this sentence that I see other people posting may change the purpose and intent of what was being said. To decide if something is “correct” you need to know the purpose behind what is being said. Neither of these is “wrong” they just apply to different situations.
Other variations:
“Mohan, go out for a walk!” ~ make’s for a more forceful command.
“Mohan goes out for a walk daily.” ~ implies that this is a regular event for Mohan to go walking.
“Mohan will go out for a walk.” ~ implies Mohan will go out for a walk later.
There are many different “correct” variations, it’s simply a matter of what you intended to imply with the words being used.