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  1. #1
    MimiHitam's Avatar
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    Default all about grammar

    for all who need a help for grammer (of course for me )
    let's discuse its here
    from simple past tense
    many
    include the v1 2 3 ^^ ::
    NO INDONESIAN NO JUNK NO FLAME
    if you speak indonesia, you will be kissed by blitzzone wkwkwkwkwk

    i'll submit you lesson
    thank you
    but i have a suggestion for chong wen (chineese)
    and history of course ^^

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  3. #2
    blitzzone's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MimiHitam View Post
    for all who need a help for grammer (of course for me )
    let's discuse its here
    from simple past tense
    many
    include the v1 2 3 ^^ ::
    NO INDONESIAN NO JUNK NO FLAME
    if you speak indonesia, you will be kissed by blitzzone wkwkwkwkwk

    i'll submit you lesson
    thank you
    but i have a suggestion for chong wen (chineese)
    and history of course ^^
    What ???????? Do you see the word that i bold it ???
    How dare you....................the truth is, if you speak english, you will be married with mimihitam

    ok if you good at grammer, tell / give us about the pattern about simpe present tense, present continous tense, present perfect tense, simple past tense, past continous tense, past perfect tense, simpe future tense, future continous tense, and future perfect tense, heheheh
    - Domini Fiat Mihi Secundum -
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  4. #3
    james95's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MimiHitam View Post
    for all who need a help for grammer (of course for me )
    let's discuse its here
    from simple past tense
    many
    include the v1 2 3 ^^ ::
    NO INDONESIAN NO JUNK NO FLAME
    if you speak indonesia, you will be kissed by blitzzone wkwkwkwkwk

    i'll submit you lesson
    thank you
    but i have a suggestion for chong wen (chineese)
    and history of course ^^
    mimihitam.I found a word mistake in your statement.See the word that I bold.The first word is no indonesian=it meant that no indonesia people is allowed here.The second bold if you speak indonesia=the correct statement should be 'please don't speak in indonesian language.Okay then that's all maybe i'll submit new post

    motto gamer sejati:Say NO To Cheat

  5. #4
    james95's Avatar
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    Here I also found some information from wikipedia about tenses:

    Past tense
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Jump to: navigation, search
    For other uses, see Past tense (disambiguation).
    The past tense is a verb tense expressing action, activity, state or being in the past.

    In English, there are two distinct types of past tense:

    Present perfect (see perfect tense)
    Preterite (or simple past)
    Each of these may also be found in the progressive (continuous) aspect.

    Simple past is formed by adding –ed to the root of a word. Example: He walked to the store. A negation is produced by adding did not and the verb in its infinitive form. Example: He did not walk to the store. Question sentences are started with did as in Did he walk to the store?

    Simple past is used for describing acts that have already been secluded and whose exact time of occurrence is known. Furthermore, simple past is used for retelling successive events. That is why it is commonly used in storytelling.

    Past progressive is formed by using the adequate form of to be and the verb’s present participle: He was going to church. By inserting not before the main verb a negation is achieved. Example: He was not going to church. A question is formed by prefixing the adequate form of to be as in Was he going?

    Past progressive is used for describing events that were just about to occur when a new event happened. The already occurring event is presented in past progressive, the new one in simple past. Example: We were sitting in the garden when the thunderstorm started.

    Present perfect simple is formed by combining have/has with the main verb’s past participle form: I have arrived. A negation is produced by inserting not after have/has: I have not arrived. Questions in present perfect are formulated by starting a sentence with have/has: Has she arrived?

    Present perfect simple is used for describing a past action’s effect on the present: He has arrived. Now he’s here. This holds true for events that have just been secluded as well as for events that have not yet occurred.

    Present perfect progressive is formed by prefixing have/has before the grammatical particle been and the verb’s present participle form: We have been waiting. A negation is expressed by including not between have/has and been: They have not been eating. As with present perfect simple, for forming a question, have/has is put at the beginning of a sentence: Have they been eating?

    Present perfect progressive is used for describing an event that has been going on until the present and may be continued in the future. It also puts emphasis on how an event has occurred. Very often since and for mark the use of present perfect progressive: I have been waiting for 5 hours / I have been waiting since 3 o’ clock.

    Furthermore, there is another version of past tense possible: past perfect.

    Past perfect simple is formed by combining the simple past form of to have with the simple past form of the main verb: We had shouted. A negation is achieved by including not after had: You had not spoken. Questions in past perfect always start with had: Had he laughed?

    Past perfect simple is used for describing secluded events that have occurred before something else followed. The event that is closer to the present is given in simple past tense: After we had visited our relatives in New York, we flew back to Toronto.

    Past perfect progressive is formed by had, the grammatical particle been and the present participle of the main verb: You had been waiting. For negation, not is included before been: I had not been waiting. A question sentence is formed by starting with had: Had she been waiting?

    If emphasis is put on the duration of a concluded action of the past, since and for are signal words for past perfect progressive: We had been waiting at the airport since the 9 p.m. flight. / They had been waiting for 3 hours now.

    motto gamer sejati:Say NO To Cheat

  6. #5
    MimiHitam's Avatar
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    btw sorry for double post and the INTERNET DOWN LAST NIGHT GRRRRRR

  7. #6
    MimiHitam's Avatar
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    What ???????? Do you see the word that i bold it ???
    How dare you....................the truth is, if you speak english, you will be married with mimihitam

    ok if you good at grammer, tell / give us about the pattern about simpe present tense, present continous tense, present perfect tense, simple past tense, past continous tense, past perfect tense, simpe future tense, future continous tense, and future perfect tense, heheheh
    your grammar is wrong ivan. "be" in you will be is for passive voice. when you in the 2 grade, you'll understand *_* the right is you will married with blitzzone

  8. #7
    MimiHitam's Avatar
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    Passive voice
    Only the sentences with transitive verbs (verbs with objects) can be changed to passive sentences

    -Simple present tense

    S= subject
    O= object
    v= verb
    > Active
    Pattern : S + V1 S/ES + 0
    S + V1 + O
    >Passive : Pattern : O + is/am/are + V3 (By....)

    - simple past tense
    > Active
    Pattern : S + v2 + O
    >Passive
    Pattern : O + was/were + V3 (by....)

    -Present continues
    > Active
    Pattern : S + is/am/are + V1ing + O
    > Passive
    Pattern : O + has/have + been + v3 (by....)

    - Present perfect tense
    >Active
    Pattern : S + has/have + v3 + o
    > Passive
    Pattern : O + has/have + been + v3 (by....)
    - Present future "be going to "
    > Active
    Pattern : S + is/am/are + going to + v1 + O
    > Passive
    Pattern : O + is/am/are + going to be + v3 (by...)

    - Sentences with modals (can,may)
    > Active : s + modals + v1 + o

    > Passive
    Pattern : O+MODALS+BE+V3 (BY....)

    IN QUESTIONS
    WHAT DO YOU LOOK?
    CHANGED TO PASSIVE :WHAT IS LOOKED BY YOU?
    DID THEY BUY A CAR?
    ANSWER : WAS A CAR BOUGHT BY THEM

    ONLY THIS I CAN TELL YOU. IF YOU HAVE MORE, JUST WRITE IT

  9. #8
    MimiHitam's Avatar
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    Simple present tense

    pattern : S + do/does + v + O

    example

    CHANGE TO SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE

    Ivan watches TV
    Ivan does watch tv

    simple huh?

  10. #9
    blitzzone's Avatar
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    oh nice2............

    Adjective Clause

    An adjective clause can be used to combine two sentences
    example :
    1. blitzzone is a good student
    2. He is a moderator in indogamers forum

    if we combine the sentences, it will be :
    -> blitzzone, who is a moderator in indogamers forum, is a good student.

    An adjective clause is used to modify a noun/noun phrase

    An adjective clause usually starts with a relative pronoun

    Who and whom (Today, i will only explain who and whom)

    1. Use Who or That to replace subject (person), EX :
    a. blitzzone thanks the people
    b. They helped him
    -> blitzzone thanks the people who helped him / blitzzone thanks the people that helped him

    2. Use Whom to replace hte object (person) The relative pronoun can be omitted
    a. mimihitam goes school by car.
    b. I punched him.
    -> mimihitam whom i punched him goes school by car.
    - Domini Fiat Mihi Secundum -
    Ω INDOGAMERS Battle Net ID : Blitzzone

  11. #10
    MimiHitam's Avatar
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    Question Tag
    It used to confirm that the statement is true or wrong

    RULE (GENERAL)
    A POSITIVE STATEMENT, A NEGATIVE TAG
    A NEGATIVE STATEMENT, A POSITIVE TAG

    BUT YOU MUST KNOW WELL ABOUT THE AUXILIARY VERBS USED IN THE TAG

    Statement Auxiliary verbs in the tag
    v1 don't
    v1 s/es doesn't
    v2 didn't
    has + noun doesnt
    has to v1 doesnt
    has + v3 hasnt
    has + been hasnt
    have + noun dont
    have to v1 dont
    have + v3 havent
    have + been havent
    had + noun didnt
    had + to v3 didnt
    had + to v3 hadnt
    had + been hadnt
    is isnt
    are arent
    am arent i
    am not am i
    was wasnt
    were werent
    will wont
    can cant
    shall shant
    may maynt
    must mustnt
    would wouldnt
    could couldnt
    should shouldnt
    might mightnt
    ought to oughtnt
    neednt need
    darent dare
    LET'S/LET US SHALL WE

    EVERYTHING
    SOMETHING IT
    NOTHING

    SOMEBODY/SOMEONE
    ANYBODY/ANYONE THEY
    EVERYBODY/EVERYONE
    NOBODY/NO ONE

    EXCEPTION
    IF THE SENTENCES USE THE WORDS NEVER, SELDOM, RARELY, HARDLY, NO.... THE AUXILIARY IN THE TAG MUST BE POSITIVE

    EXAMPLE OF ALL

    NOBODY CAN REACH SATURNUS, CAN THEY?
    HE IS A DOCTOR NOW, ISN'T HE?
    BLITZZONE MARRIED JAMES95, DIDN'T HE? ^^

  12. #11
    blitzzone's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by yordan
    EXCEPTION
    IF THE SENTENCES USE THE WORDS NEVER, SELDOM, RARELY, HARDLY, NO.... THE AUXILIARY IN THE TAG MUST BE POSITIVE
    not only that, if the sentences is negative.....
    - Domini Fiat Mihi Secundum -
    Ω INDOGAMERS Battle Net ID : Blitzzone

  13. #12
    MimiHitam's Avatar
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    YES I KNEW IT BLITZZONE! hohohohhoho

    now about simple past tense

    Pattern : S + did + V1 + O

    Example

    1. People of this kingdom suffered because of his ridiculous taxes
    ANSWER : people of this kingdom did suffer because of his ridiculous taxes

    4 blitzzone THIS IS FOR YOUR FINAL TEST OF ENGLISH. BECAUSE SIR METO ACTUALLY LIKE THIS

  14. #13
    blitzzone's Avatar
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    simple past tense pattern is s+ did + v1 + o ???
    but isn't it S + V2 + O + Time (last year, last month, yesterdey, etc)
    - Domini Fiat Mihi Secundum -
    Ω INDOGAMERS Battle Net ID : Blitzzone

  15. #14
    MimiHitam's Avatar
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    simple past tense pattern is s+ did + v1 + o ???
    but isn't it S + V2 + O + Time (last year, last month, yesterdey, etc)
    lol mod junk

    btw you repeated it again -_-a

  16. #15
    The_Three_Kingdom's Avatar
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    Past Perfect Tense


    When is the past perfect tense used?

    The past perfect tense is used to describe an action that happened in the past before something anther action in the past. The past perfect tense aways decribes two actions in the past. The first action that happened in the past the past pefect tense is used; for the 2nd action that happened the past simple tense is used.

    The past perfect tense is used when:

    * There are two actions that occurred in the past.
    * There actions happened at different times.
    * The past perfect tense is use to state the 1st action.
    * The past simple tense is used to state the 2nd action.

    Example Past Present Future
    I wasn't hungry when I came home from school. I had eatten on my way home from schoo.

    x


    We had already left for school, when I found out that the my English class was cancelled.

    x


    I had waited one hour for the teacher , before I decided to go to call her.

    x


    She had gone to China, before she went to Japan.

    x


    He had learned Brown Univeristy, before he learned at City Colloge.

    x



    Already - already is used with the past perfect tense to emphasize the first action.

    Examples:

    * I had already left for work, when the school called to tell me not to come to school.
    * I had already left for school , when I found out that the my English class was cancelled.
    * They had already left for school, when I came to pick them up.

    Already - is used to state an action happened, before expected or planned.
    Just - is used to state an action that happen a short time ago.

    Example:

    * I had just missed the bus, I saw it drive away.
    * They had just gotten home, when it started to snow.
    * My sister had just left the house, when I tried to call.

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