|
- you are arrived vs you have arrived | WordReference Forums
I'd like to know the right meaning difference between these two sentences: "you are arrived" "you have arrived" Thanks
- By the time + past perfect - WordReference Forums
1 By the time the police arrived, the two men had disappeared 2 By the time the police had arrived, the two men had disappeared According to the key to one of the exercises in English Grammar in Use, both are possible, but I really fail to see why It makes no sense to me use the past perfect twice and therefore I would say #1 In fact, the author gives a few example sentences, and he
- He is arrived - WordReference Forums
Hi folks,I've got a stupid count is the sentence "he is arrived" grammatically wrong? For talking about the past she should use Ex "He arrived yesterday" "He has just arrived" "He arrived (or + has) this afternoon" Are these sentences right? I can't remember how should we use the present
- It (has) arrived today - WordReference Forums
I agree; with "today" specified, the simple past tense is right Without "today", the present perfect would be preferred "It has arrived" would simply confirm the recent arrival (possibly today, possibly some time within the past few days)
- arrive at home arrive home? | WordReference Forums
But "arrived at my home" is used in the headline in this British newspaper ("Strangers arrived at my home wanting sex): 'Strangers arrived at my home wanting sex - I nearly threw up when I learnt why' I heard the Mirror is a subpar newspaper, maybe that's why? Ah, no
- By the time he came, we lt;left had left gt; [simple past vs past perfect]
Maybe the real question has to do with "I arrived home" Once I crossed the threshold and walked across the room to the writing desk, perhaps it became "after" I arrived home, too late to do anything "as soon as" or "by the time" I arrived
- arrived lt;in on by gt; the bus | WordReference Forums
I searched on the dictionary and found different forms of this sentence what is definitely correct or the difference between them I arrived on the bus I arrived in the bus I arrived by bus Thank you Regards
- to arrive at for to work - WordReference Forums
Hi, In my Business English workbook it's said that we say "to arrive at work", but then there is this sentence: "I always arrive on time FOR work" Are they both correct? And can we say "to arrive to work"? Thanks!
|
|
|