Is the whole family singular or plural? All the people of the whole family singular or plural?

Is the whole family singular or plural? All the people of the whole family singular or plural?


The whole family is regarded as a whole
A translator; a whole family
All the people of the whole family
Everyone in all families
Original answer, welcome to adopt
[your 10 points of satisfaction, unlimited motivation of our team]



Is people singular or plural? How to use verbs in specific contexts?


people
There are 56 people in our China
When it is used to explain "people" or "people", it is a collective noun. The singular and plural are in the same shape. S. how many people are there?



The third person singular form, present participle and past tense of English words
visit、read、fly、study、get、open、swim、see、write、run.


visits visiting visited
reads reading read
flies flying flew
studies studying studied
gets getting got
opens opening opened
swims swimming swam
sees seeing saw
writes writing wrote
runs running ran



What are the differences between the past tense and the past participle? When are they used?


The past tense is a tense of a verb, while the past participle is a case, which needs to be clarified
I guess you mean what's the difference between the past tense and the perfect tense? If the past tense is compared with the present perfect tense, the former is used to simply explain something that happened at a certain time in the past, that is, to simply explain the fact; while the present perfect tense is used to explain something that not only happened in the past but also has an impact on the present, The difference between he ate the apple and he had eaten the apple is that the former emphasizes the fact that he ate like this, or that the apple disappeared, while the latter emphasizes that he "has" eaten ", which hides some unspoken following, such as his state after eating, or what he wants to eat
The difference between the past tense and the past perfect tense is very simple. As long as something happened before a certain point in the past, it can be expressed by the past perfect tense. For example, he had an English before he ate the apple. Can you understand me? I am a college English teacher. I sincerely hope you can understand my explanation



Who can tell me 40 verbs and write their past tense, present participle?





Past tense present participle form of verb
Write the past of the verb
stop
see
drive
let
catty
keep
join
find
think
teach
catch
present participle form
stay
begin
forget
lie
die
run
prefer
give
ring
dance
hope


Stop - stoppedsee - sawdrive - lowelet - letcathy (carry carried) keep keep join - joinedfind - foundthink - thoughtteach - thoughtcatch - caught



The difference between the past participle of go and the past tense of verb
What's the difference between went and gone?


Went is used in the past tense
Gone and have (had) are generally used as perfectives



What's the difference between the present tense and the present progressive tense in English tense,


Review of eight tenses in junior high school English
Tense is one of the most important contents in English learning. When junior middle school students use it in practice, they often feel more difficult about it. Let's summarize and review these tenses
1、 The present tense
Concept: an action or behavior that occurs frequently and repeatedly, and the present situation
Adverbials of time: often, usually, always, sometimes, every week (day, year, month...), once a week, on Sundays, etc
Basic structure: be verb; action verb
Negative forms: ① AM / is / are + not; ② if the predicate in this tense is an action verb, add don't before it; if the subject is the third person singular, use doesn't, and restore the action verb at the same time
General questions: first, put the verb be at the beginning of the sentence; second, ask questions with the auxiliary verb do. If the subject is the third person singular, use does. At the same time, restore the action verb
2、 In the past tense:
Concept: the action or state that happened at a certain time in the past; the habitual and regular action or behavior in the past
Adverbials of time: ago, yesterday, the day before yesterday, last week (year, night, month...), in 1989, just now, at the age of 5, one day, long ago, once upon a time, etc
Basic structure: be verb; action verb
Negative forms: ① was / were + not; ② adding didn't before the action verb and reducing the action verb at the same time
General questions: (1) put was or were at the beginning of the sentence; (2) ask questions with the past tense did of the auxiliary verb do and restore the action verb at the same time
3、 The present continuous tense
Concept: refers to the action and behavior in progress at the present stage or when speaking
Adverbials of time: now, at this time, these days, etc
Basic structure: AM / is / are + doing
Negative form: AM / is / are + not + doing
Put the verb be at the beginning of the sentence
4、 Past continuous tense
Concept: an act or action that is taking place or going on at a certain time in the past
Adverbials of time: at this time yesterday, at that time or when
Basic structure: was / were + doing
Negative form: was / were + not + doing
Put was or were at the beginning of the sentence
5、 The present perfect tense:
Concept: the influence or result of the action that happened or completed in the past on the present, or the action or state that has started in the past and continues to the present
Adverbials of time: Recently, lately, since..., for..., in the past few years, etc
Basic structure: have / has + done
Negative form: have / has + not + done
General question: have / has at the beginning of the sentence
6、 Past perfect tense:
Concept: actions or behaviors that happened before or completed before a certain action in the past, that is, the past
Before, by the end of last year (term, month...), etc
Basic structure: had + done
Negative form: had + not + done
Put had at the beginning of the sentence
7、 In the future:
Concept: the action or state of being that will happen and the intention, plan or preparation to do something
Adverbials of time: tomorrow, next day (week, month, year...), soon, in a few minutes, by..., the day after tomorrow, etc
Basic structure: ① AM / is / are / going to + do; ② will / shall + do
Negative forms: ① AM / is / are + not + going to + do; ② will / shall + not + do
General questions: be at the beginning of the sentence; will / shall at the beginning of the sentence
8、 Past future tense
Concept: Based on a moment in the past and looking at the future from the past
Adverbials of time: the next day (morning, year...), the following month (week...), etc
Basic structure: ① was / were / going to + do; ② would / should + do
Negative forms: ① was / were / not + going to + do; ② would / should + not + do
General questions: (1) was or were at the beginning of the sentence; (2) would / should refer to the beginning of the sentence



The difference between English, the past tense and the present perfect tense


The usage of the general past tense: the general past tense indicates the past action and state. The general past tense usually has words, phrases or clauses indicating the time of action, such as yesterday, the day before last, last week, two days ago, etc



What's the difference between the present perfect tense and the past tense in English
Please tell me when to use the perfect tense and when to use the past tense


The present perfect tense emphasizes the influence of past actions on the present, while the past tense only describes past actions without emphasizing the influence or result
1.I have posted the letter.
2.I went to post the letter yesterday.
I've already sent the letter. I went to post the letter yesterday. I didn't explain whether I sent it or not. Maybe I forgot it on the way
3.I have read the book.
4.I read the book yesterday.
I have read the book, that is, I know the general content of the book
Another difference between the two tenses is that the present perfect tense is not used with past time adverbials, but only with already, just, ever, never, yet, before, so far, since + time point for + time period, while the past tense has obvious time adverbials, such as yes, yesterday, last week, semi years ago, etc