she has____ oranges than you have 1.more 2.most 3.many 4.much

she has____ oranges than you have 1.more 2.most 3.many 4.much


1.more
The following "than" means that the previous table must be more



He asked me A if she will come B how many books I want to have C what was wrong whith me


C
The past tense is in the main sentence
So we should also use the past tense in the clause
A. B is not the past tense



He asked me_____ .A、what's wrong with me B、if she will come C、how many books I wanted to have
D、they would help us do it


C
A. The tense B is inconsistent, and the meaning of D and asked is different



According to she asked me.Will You come here tomorrow? She asked me?


She asked me if I would go there the next day.
She asked me whether I would go there the next day.
Sure



When does the verb at the beginning of a sentence use the original verb form or to + verb form or gerund form?


Gerund: active
To do: the purpose of the table
Original form: imperative sentence



Feel followed by the original verb or ing form?
I mean, for example, does feel my heart add being or beat?


Feel my heart is beating
Feel like doing



What is the difference between the original form of the to + verb and the form of the verb + ing


The verb + ing refers to something in the past or happening. For example, stop doing sth, forget doing sth
Verb + to + verb prototype refers to what is about to happen. For example, stop to do sth



Why do you add the original verb form after "like to" and "ing" after "look forward to"?


About like todo
First of all, there are four forms of non finite verbs in English
1.do
2.done
3.doing
4.to do
Like to do and like doing are similar in meaning. Doing refers to something and do refers to the action
For example, I like eating hamburgers and I like to eat hamburgers.eating Emphasize the action
About look foeward to
Here, to is a preposition. If you add a noun after the preposition, you should also change the verb into a noun
Special notice: the answer on the first floor is wrong, especially: like to's to is not a preposition



Is used in used to do the past tense? If it is followed by an "and" and then a verb, is this verb going to use the past tense


Used to is an English idiom, so it must be a past tense. Used to must be followed by a verb, so used to plus and is a grammatical error. Used to must be followed by an infinitive verb



Can "to" in "too... To" be followed by the verb past tense?


This is not possible. This to can only add the original form of the verb. Here to is the sign of the infinitive