Table of Contents
What is correct I have send or I have sent?
I have sent you an email vs I have send you an email. When using the helping verb have, the correct form of the past tense of the verb to send is sent. Expert Tip! If the action is complete, it is usually better to use the more direct form, I sent you an email.
How do you use mailed in a sentence?
Mailed sentence example
- Paychecks would be mailed weekly.
- He said he mailed me the key to the new lock.
- By 10:30 she had mailed the package and decided to stop at a little restaurant in the strip mall for something to eat.
- The only thing I mailed was Mrs.
Is have sent correct?
Both are correct, but “I have already sent” is the present perfect tense and “I had already sent” is the past perfect.
How do you say sent mail?
You sendt a command to the mail program “send the mail”. The appropriate reply is “I have sent the mail as you instructed”. That becomes “Mail has been sent”. The mail program is reporting what it has done, not just what has happened in the past.
What does it mean when something is mailed?
to send a letter, etc. or to email something: She mailed it last week but it still hasn’t arrived.
Is it mailed or mail?
As verbs the difference between mailed and mail is that mailed is (mail) or mailed can be (mail) while mail is to send (a letter, parcel, etc) through the mail or mail can be to arm with mail.
What does mailing it in mean?
To deliver a performance without commitment or effort, with lackluster results.
How do you say I have sent it?
2 Answers
- sent – past simple tense.
- have sent – present perfect tense.
- had sent – past perfect tense.
Is it correct to say I have mailed you a letter?
The verb mailed is transitive, which means it carries an object. Thus, I have mailed you is incorrect, but I have mailed a letter to you is correct. Confusion must be avoided, because the verb emailed is used extensively nowadays as a non-transitive verb. I have sent on mail is a grammatical disaster.
How do you use send by mail in a sentence?
Send is a transitive verb which requires an object. So the second sentence must be: I have sent it (to you) by mail. The preposition is strange. So I have used by mail.
What is the difference between I mailed you and I have mailed?
I have mailed you (before you called me). Both are correct. I mailed you is in the simple past tense. I mailed you the documents you needed three days ago. I have mailed you is in the present perfect tense. I have mailed you the documents you needed just this morning. Both sentences are grammatically correct.
Is “I mailed you” past tense or present perfect?
You are asking whether past tense (“I mailed you”) or present perfect (“I have mailed you” is correct. Of course they must both be correct, or else why would we have these two tenses in English? The past tense is correct if you are focusing on the past.