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What is the difference between I asked and I have asked?
2 Answers. “I already asked her” is in simple past tense, indicating that the event occurred in the past. “I have already asked her” is in present perfect tense and is used in situations where a past event has relevance to the current situation.
Is it ask or asked?
Use “ask for” with the object you want to receive: I asked the teacher for a pencil. I asked her for a glass of water. My son asked for a video game for Christmas.
How do you answer do you understand?
You can do that by saying:
- OK / Alright / Sure.
- Got it.
- OK, I get it now / That’s clear, thank you.
- Fair enough / I see where you’re coming from / I take your point / That makes sense.
- Of course / Absolutely.
- I appreciate why you think that, but…
- I hear what you’re saying, but…
- That’s totally fair / I don’t blame you.
Is had asked correct?
Answer : Both are correct but according to the context. (1) “I had asked the question” means that I had asked one particular question, quite a long time ago i.e. quite a bit of or some, time has passed since I had asked that particular question.
Is asked or has been asked?
E.g. “I was asked that, but I can’t remember what I replied”. “I have been asked” is an example of the present perfect tense. It means the speaker has been asked at a point in the past recent enough to have definite ongoing relevance. E.g. “I have been asked to pass on some news to you, so here it is.”
When we use Asked in a sentence?
Asked sentence example. I asked him if he ever wished to write his thoughts. Sarah asked the question with genuine interest. Prince Vasili knew this, and having once realized that if he asked on behalf of all who begged of him, he would soon be unable to ask for himself, he became chary of using his influence.
Will ask or will asked?
Both can be correct. “I will ask” is a statement, but “Will I ask?” is a question. In English, subject-then-verb usually makes a statement, but verb-then-subject usually makes a question. Almost always, the verb that comes before the subject in a question is a helping verb like will or does.
Did you understand or understand?
Both are correct, but the latter refers to past time. If you want to know whether someone has understood what you have just said, “Do you understand?” is the right choice. On the other hand, if you are asking whether someone understood what was said to them previously, “Did you understand?” would be appropriate.
What TP means?
toilet paper
toilet paper. verb (used with or without object) TP’d, TP·ing. to cover a house, a tree, or other structure, usually on someone’s home property, with strips of toilet paper, as a prank: We TP’d the English teacher’s house last Halloween.
What is the reply for same to you?
Usually, used to reply to an insult or a greeting. Basically, you’re saying “whatever you said to me, I say back to you.” There are a bunch of ways in English to say it too: “Same goes to you.”
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