I have seen I have been seeing | WordReference Forums I have seen Kitty recently I have been seeing Kitty recently To be honest, I think that only the 1st sentence is correct because see is a state verb What do you think?
have been sent or was sent | WordReference Forums Dear all, Is that right that you say: The goods have been sent or the goods were sent yesterday last week ? General rule: have been without time information and was without time information ? Best regards Christos
It is lightning There is lightning | WordReference Forums Hola, la mayoría de veces uso el verbo to be para referirme al estado del clima, eg It's windy cloudy hailing sinembargo no logro saber como hacerlo con lightning thunder flood, tornado, clear sky, rainbow entonces no se si decir "It is lightning ?? o There is lightning" ?? It is
how what does he look like? (appearance) - WordReference Forums I'm a bit confused and I am not sure whether the difference between what does he look like? and how does he look like? when asking about someone's physical appearance has something to do with British and American English or not I would appreciate an answer from both a British and an American
at in on early morning | WordReference Forums Hello, I'm confused about the preposition in the expression "at in on early morning" For example: 1 "At early morning I had a walk along the river " - this is a sentence from my English learning book I wonder if "At" is the right preposition in the sentence If I replace it with "in", i e
Pride buses in the UK - RailUK Forums I recall the rather unfortunate incident involving Plymouth Citybus, who had a vehicle in Pride rainbow livery and rather clumsily attempted to ‘repurpose’ it as a “Thank you NHS” rainbow scheme instead during the pandemic, receiving much criticism as a result Linked news article below:
I have worked here since vs Ive been working here since My two cents' worth: I wouldn't use "I have read this book since last month " Typical explanations in the chapter from any given grammar book on the difference between between the simple and continuous ("progressive") forms of the present perfect:
Trainline AI assistant: incorrect advice | RailUK Forums Why anyone would do this, having presumably seen the memes about tricking ChatGPT into saying 2+2=7 and that there's only 4 colours in the rainbow, I've no idea This is just an awful idea which I'm betting they'll have to roll back on at some point when they see the complaints come in
What do you call somebody who is unable to speak? Rainbow, you're right "Left mute" is much more acceptable than "made mute" I still can't, quite, accept "mute" myself, except perhaps as a technical term usable by medical people But I'm going to shut up because, clearly, nearly everyone else is happy with it