Can you send me or can you send to me?

Can you send me or can you send to me?

HomeArticles, FAQCan you send me or can you send to me?

2 Answers. “Send it to me” is correct and more commonly used. Although “send me it” is grammatically correct, it’s not commonly used in formal writing.

Q. What is correct I have send or I have sent?

The main difference between the two sentences is of tenses. “I sent you.” is in simple past tense. (It is used to denote an action completed in in the past.) “I have sent you” is in present perfect tense.

Q. Can you please send me or could you please send me?

Both are correct. The first is more direct, and the second is more polite. Could you please . . . gives slightly more room for refusal than Can you please . . .

Q. Can you please comma?

Please is an adverb that functions as an interjection in polite requests. It can go at the beginning, middle, or end of a sentence. If please comes at the end of a sentence then you should almost always use a comma before it. …

Q. Does yes please need a comma?

Comma, please. “Yes, please.” Yes, there’s a comma after the little ‘yes’ here.” There’s also a comma before a ‘please’ in polite sentences.

Q. Is Please be advised polite?

italki – “please be advised” “pleas be noted” I often find these phrase, “Please be advised …”, “Please be. “Please note” — not “please be noted” — is a modest and polite way of calling someone’s attention to something. “Please be advised” is more formal, unrelaxed, and legalistic.

Q. How can I check my sentence is correct or not?

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Q. Is give me it correct grammar?

‘Give me it’ is grammatical. It is rather blunt and would only be used casually, but it breaks no rules and is in common use.

Q. Have been and had been?

“Had been” is used to mean that something happened in the past and has already ended. “Have been” and “has been” are used to mean that something began in the past and has lasted into the present time.

Q. Had had been usage?

“had” and “had been” : They come into picture only when we are talking of two past actions and we want to show their chronology. Case 1: Use “had” when both the action are complete at the time of reference and one action completed before the other. Example: I had studied hard, so I did well in exam.

Q. Where we use have been?

“Has been” and “have been” are both in the present perfect tense. “Has been” is used in the third-person singular and “have been” is used for first- and second-person singular and all plural uses. The present perfect tense refers to an action that began at some time in the past and is still in progress.

Q. Had been worked meaning?

This is in the past perfect tense. …had been working… This is in the past perfect continuous tense. The latter means she had been working continuously with an advertising company for the past 5 years. The first does not necessarily mean her work with the advertising company was uninterrupted over the five years.

Q. Has or had worked?

Simple past ‘worked’ is the natural choice, though you can also say ‘had worked’. Also, the present perfect is not just a past action before a present one: it’s one where the results of the past action continue to be relevant in the present.

Q. Was working or had been working?

“I was working on that soup all day! I HAVE BEEN working all day is past tense, or formal past. I WAS working the entire day is the same. I HAD BEEN working on that soup all that day, would also constitute a sufficient past tense way of interpreting the same as above, for example.

Q. Has worked or worked?

“I worked” refers to the past. “I have worked” refers to the past, but the action is likely ongoing or has occurred up to the present moment. I worked in Japan for six years. = I am no longer working in Japan I have worked in Japan for six years.

Q. What tense is have worked?

Present perfect simple (I have worked)

Q. Has been working since grammar?

‘Is working’ is the present continuous form of a verb which indicates that the action is being performed at the present. ‘Has been working ‘ is the present perfect continuous form of the verb which explains that an action is being performed for some time and is not over.

Q. Was worked is correct?

Where the Progressive tense makes sense is if you asked “What were you doing when I called?” Then, “I was working.” makes sense and is distinct from the simple past. As is always the case, the context and wording make a huge difference in which tense is more “appropriate.”

Q. Has or had use?

When to use HAVE HAD & HAD HAD. In the present perfect, the auxiliary verb is always have (for I, you, we, they) or has (for he, she, it). In the past perfect, the auxiliary verb is always had.

Q. What is the past perfect tense of become?

Perfect tenses

past perfectⓘ pluperfect
Ihad become
youhad become
he, she, ithad become
wehad become

Q. What are the rules of had grammar?

The past perfect form of have is had had (had + past participle form of have). The past perfect tense is used when we are talking about the past and want to refer back to an earlier past time. She felt marvelous after she had had a good night’s sleep. They dismissed him before he had had a chance to apologize.

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