"Did" is always used for the past tense. Example: He did his homework yesterday. (This means he completed his homework in the past.) "Have" and "Has" are used for the present perfect tense, which connects past actions to the present. Example: She has eaten breakfast. (This means she ate breakfast at some point before now, and it might be relevant now.)
Before singular or plural nouns when the speaker and listener both know what is being referred to: Example: "Please pass me the salt." (Both the speaker and the listener know which salt is being referred to.) Before superlative adjectives: Example: "He is the tallest boy in the class." Before ordinal numbers: Example: "She was the first person to arrive." Before singular nouns that represent a whole class of things: Example: "The elephant is a large animal." Before singular nouns when they are specific, unique, or already mentioned in the conversation: Example: "I met the president yesterday." Before singular or plural nouns when referring to something unique or specific: Example: "The sun rises in the east." Before proper nouns that represent a group of people: Example: "The British love tea." Before names of rivers, oceans, seas, and mountain ranges: Example: "The Nile is the longest river in the world." Before directions or points on the globe: Example: "We traveled to the North Pole." Before certain nouns that are used as a specific class: Example: "The poor need assistance."
The construction "V3 with 'is'" refers to using a verb in its third form (also known as the past participle form) with the helping verb "is" in English. "Door is closed." In this sentence: "Door" is the subject. "is" is the helping verb indicating the present tense of the verb "to be." "closed" is the past participle form of the verb "to close."
The word "ain't" is a contraction commonly used in informal English to mean "am not," "is not," "are not," "has not," or "have not." Am not / Is not / Are not: "I ain't going to the party." (I am not going to the party.) "She ain't ready yet." (She is not ready yet.) "They ain't here." (They are not here.)
Yes, the word "did" is used with "you," "they," and "we" in English. "Did" is the past tense form of the auxiliary verb "do" and is used to form questions and negative sentences in the past tense.
Is use singular noun n pronoune She is happy. (Condition) She is not here. (Negative) Is it raining outside?(Interrogative) Am action/ condition. I'm a teacher I m tired. Are U v they Condition/state The dogs r barking loudly The flowers r very beautifuly Was use past action E ,she, it, I It was raining yesterday The dog was barking loudly U v they Were They were playing football yesterday The birds r chirping loudly in the morning. Do ,U ,v ,they, I Sawal , negative, emphasis Do u like tea I don't understand the question. Do use I do like chocolate cake I do believers Does She ,he ,IT She does a home work everyday Does e play football weekend. Did E ,she ,it, I Past action E did in homework Did they go to the party Has use e ,she ,it ownership, possession State/ condition She has finished the homework. He is visited to Paris. Had U,v ,they ,I Possession/ownership They have a car I have visited Paris They have finished work Obligation, duty
Singular Noun and Pronoun Usage Condition: She is happy. Negative: She is not here. Interrogative: Is it raining outside? Present Tense (am, is, are) Am (I): I am a teacher. I am tired. Is (he, she, it): He is happy. She is not here. It is raining outside. Are (you, we, they): The dogs are barking loudly. The flowers are very beautiful. Past Tense (was, were) Was (I, he, she, it): I was tired. She was happy. It was raining yesterday. The dog was barking loudly. Were (you, we, they): They were playing football yesterday. The birds were chirping loudly in the morning. Present Simple (do, does) Do (you, we, they, I): Interrogative: Do you like tea? Negative: I don't understand the question. Emphasis: I do like chocolate cake. I do believe in miracles. Does (he, she, it): She does her homework every day. Does he play football on weekends? Past Simple (did) Did (I, he, she, it, you, we, they): Past action: I did my homework. Did they go to the party? Present Perfect (has, have) Has (he, she, it): She has finished the homework. He has visited Paris. Have (I, you, we, they): They have a car. I have visited Paris. They have finished the work. Past Perfect (had) Had (I, you, he, she, it, we, they): I had finished my work before they arrived. They had already eaten by the time we got there.
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Thank you so much ma'am for aploading 🎉😊❤
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Who all' are learning English
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@@tsmadaan tq maam
Definitely this is👍🤗 video and lots of helpful...basically😮 helping verb..thanks a lot of team sir jee
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To mam little bit confusion did nd have /has means did b past nd have has b past
"Did" is always used for the past tense.
Example: He did his homework yesterday. (This means he completed his homework in the past.)
"Have" and "Has" are used for the present perfect tense, which connects past actions to the present.
Example: She has eaten breakfast. (This means she ate breakfast at some point before now, and it might be relevant now.)
i want to ask about use of the ..
how to use ''the '' in sentence
Before singular or plural nouns when the speaker and listener both know what is being referred to:
Example: "Please pass me the salt." (Both the speaker and the listener know which salt is being referred to.)
Before superlative adjectives:
Example: "He is the tallest boy in the class."
Before ordinal numbers:
Example: "She was the first person to arrive."
Before singular nouns that represent a whole class of things:
Example: "The elephant is a large animal."
Before singular nouns when they are specific, unique, or already mentioned in the conversation:
Example: "I met the president yesterday."
Before singular or plural nouns when referring to something unique or specific:
Example: "The sun rises in the east."
Before proper nouns that represent a group of people:
Example: "The British love tea."
Before names of rivers, oceans, seas, and mountain ranges:
Example: "The Nile is the longest river in the world."
Before directions or points on the globe:
Example: "We traveled to the North Pole."
Before certain nouns that are used as a specific class:
Example: "The poor need assistance."
Ma'am when do we use V3 with is......
For Ex:- Door is closed
Can you clarify it...
The construction "V3 with 'is'" refers to using a verb in its third form (also known as the past participle form) with the helping verb "is" in English.
"Door is closed."
In this sentence:
"Door" is the subject.
"is" is the helping verb indicating the present tense of the verb "to be."
"closed" is the past participle form of the verb "to close."
Make vide on conditional sentence like people for vote
Noted, dear 😃
Mam, ain’t ka use kaise karenge...?..
The word "ain't" is a contraction commonly used in informal English to mean "am not," "is not," "are not," "has not," or "have not."
Am not / Is not / Are not:
"I ain't going to the party." (I am not going to the party.)
"She ain't ready yet." (She is not ready yet.)
"They ain't here." (They are not here.)
Ma'am did ka istemal you,they,we key saath bhi too hoota hai ?
Yes, the word "did" is used with "you," "they," and "we" in English. "Did" is the past tense form of the auxiliary verb "do" and is used to form questions and negative sentences in the past tense.
Who doesn't have friends to talk to in English...?🤔
Nice ✅
@@tsmadaan Thank you so much ma'am 👏
Sir अंग्रेजी की किताब मिल सकती है क्या आपके द्वारा रचित।
Hi mam mereko english sikhna hai toda thoda english samjh atat hai but kaha se start karu kuch samajh nehi ata plz help mee 🙏🙏
Dear, you can join Awal sir's course through the link given below-
bit.ly/awalspokenenglishcourse
Is use singular noun n pronoune
She is happy. (Condition)
She is not here. (Negative)
Is it raining outside?(Interrogative)
Am action/ condition.
I'm a teacher
I m tired.
Are
U v they
Condition/state
The dogs r barking loudly
The flowers r very beautifuly
Was use past action
E ,she, it, I
It was raining yesterday
The dog was barking loudly
U v they
Were
They were playing football yesterday
The birds r chirping loudly in the morning.
Do ,U ,v ,they, I
Sawal , negative, emphasis
Do u like tea
I don't understand the question.
Do use I do like chocolate cake
I do believers
Does
She ,he ,IT
She does a home work everyday
Does e play football weekend.
Did
E ,she ,it, I
Past action
E did in homework
Did they go to the party
Has use e ,she ,it ownership, possession
State/ condition
She has finished the homework.
He is visited to Paris.
Had
U,v ,they ,I
Possession/ownership
They have a car
I have visited Paris
They have finished work
Obligation, duty
Singular Noun and Pronoun Usage
Condition:
She is happy.
Negative:
She is not here.
Interrogative:
Is it raining outside?
Present Tense (am, is, are)
Am (I):
I am a teacher.
I am tired.
Is (he, she, it):
He is happy.
She is not here.
It is raining outside.
Are (you, we, they):
The dogs are barking loudly.
The flowers are very beautiful.
Past Tense (was, were)
Was (I, he, she, it):
I was tired.
She was happy.
It was raining yesterday.
The dog was barking loudly.
Were (you, we, they):
They were playing football yesterday.
The birds were chirping loudly in the morning.
Present Simple (do, does)
Do (you, we, they, I):
Interrogative:
Do you like tea?
Negative:
I don't understand the question.
Emphasis:
I do like chocolate cake.
I do believe in miracles.
Does (he, she, it):
She does her homework every day.
Does he play football on weekends?
Past Simple (did)
Did (I, he, she, it, you, we, they):
Past action:
I did my homework.
Did they go to the party?
Present Perfect (has, have)
Has (he, she, it):
She has finished the homework.
He has visited Paris.
Have (I, you, we, they):
They have a car.
I have visited Paris.
They have finished the work.
Past Perfect (had)
Had (I, you, he, she, it, we, they):
I had finished my work before they arrived.
They had already eaten by the time we got there.