English, asked by GurpreetSingh1810, 1 year ago

Which is correct I and he is waiting or I and hevare waiting or I and he am waiting. Explain with reason ​

Answers

Answered by tanishq215
0

I think these all options are wrong

Correct answer should be:

I've been waiting here for hours implies that the action has been occurring and is still occurring at the time when you are saying it ("I've been waiting here for hours and he still hasn't shown up!"). "I waited here for hours" is better used to describe an action which was completed in the past ("I waited here for hours yesterday and the man never showed up.")

Almost always in your example the correct response will be "I've been waiting here for hours." The only cases where this is inappropriate would likely require further explanation ("Finally, you're here! Where were you? I waited here for hours, took a nap, came back and you still hadn't shown up."). This extra explanation would need to include a completion of the act of waiting in that spot at some point in order to justify using the 2nd choice.

HOPE IT IS HELPFUL TO YOU

PLEASE MARK AS BRAINLIEST


GurpreetSingh1810: my question is that if two subjects are joined by and the according to which subject we will choose verb
tanishq215: Second one
GurpreetSingh1810: sure
GurpreetSingh1810: give example
tanishq215: But you conform with your merit ranker or teacher
Similar questions