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- tense - Difference between is added and was added - English . . .
And we tend to read a simple present is added as a predicate adjective = “is new” The reason why folks are uncomfortable with is added in the last version is because the present-tense attribution of “newness” doesn’t fit well with last version, something from the past
- Is added or has been added - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
What is right way to write or speak? I am a developer and want to add message to my application once the record has been added to the database So I am confused about the right way to write speak
- word usage - A review was added TO, IN, or ON? - English Language . . .
A new review was added on Sam's Bowling alley My confusion is whether it should be on, to, or in A review is added to or in a place (coffee place, library, museum, etc) I'm finding it a little hard to find sentences with similar structure on the web PS: First question here, so unsure of tags
- Should I choose new or newly? - English Language Learners Stack . . .
Use newly This refers to the recency of the manufacturing of the disk If you use new you are refering to it as a "manufactured disk" as opposed to "handcrafted disk" or "homemade disk" or however else a disk might be produced created
- has been or have been is the right grammar
This report problem is a singular noun phrase, so you must use the singular verb form has You'd use the plural if you were saying These report problems have been resolved
- What is the difference between were and have been?
What is the difference between "were" and "have been", and are these sentences gramatically correct? 1) some of the best known writers of detective fiction in the twentieth century were women 2)
- Is this sentence correct? A lot of sugar have been added to the milk.
A lot of sugar have has been added to the milk No, the verb should be the singular "has" The quantificational noun "lot" is number-transparent, which means that the whole noun phrase takes on the number of the noun that is complement of the preposition "of", which in this case is the non-count "sugar" Since non-count nouns like "sugar" take singular verb agreement it follows that the verb
- Is there a more formal way to say, As an added bonus?
2 as a bonus would suffice Bonus already means 'something extra', and is derived from the Latin bonus ('good') as an added bonus is informal since it has a redundancy
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