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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- If you send an email that you already sent, can you say you resent it . . .
Your first sentence describes habitual action so the present tense of "to resent" makes sense The second sentence is in the past tense so the past tense of "to resend" makes sense Also, I think most people would be more likely to say I resent it, "it" the email, not "that" the other person's statement
- The ambiguity of: resent your message - English Language Usage . . .
Compare this to other cases in which "to resent" could be grammatically correct: I resent your message This is ambiguous between the two options: The present tense of "to resent" => "Today, I am offended by your message" The past tense of "to resend" => "Yesterday, I sent your message again" I have resented your message
- meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Additionally, Dictionary com specifically offers "to envy or resent the pleasure or good fortune of (someone)" Sounds rather spot on
- word usage - Difference between grudge and resentment - English . . .
We resent things all the time, but generally let them go; if we hold onto the offense and our reaction to it, then we are holding a grudge
- Whats the difference between envy and resent? [closed]
What's the difference between envy and resent? envy painful or resentful awareness of an advantage enjoyed by another joined with a desire to possess the same advantage Envy is the feeling you have when you wish you could have the same thing or quality that someone else has
- Using present perfect for things that happen in future
Is it grammatical to use "Present Perfect" tense for something that is going to happen in future? As far as I know, the Present Perfect is used to say that an action happened at an unspecified time
- word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I am writing a résumé I want to specify that I started my education in 2009 and as of now I am at the 4th grade (in other words, still learning), so how should I specify that in résumé: 2009 - pre
- Does more recently just mean recently here?
more recently = later than the 1960s (in a context where there's some meaningful connection between all three of the 1960s, that later time, and now time of utterance Without the word more, there would be no implied reference to the 1960s, so it couldn't mean later than the 1960s - it would have to mean a little while ago shortly before now
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