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- be agreed to with by - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
They're all perfectly grammatical - as would be #4 This action was agreed by Jake, if we assume OP is just checking all permutations of to or nothing followed by with or by, which is what it looks like to me) It's semantically irrelevant whether to is present or not The difference is with Jake implies the speaker interacted with Jake to get that agreement (effectively, the speaker also
- Agreed or agree? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
12 I often see the following exchange on Internet forums: A: (some proposition) B: Agreed Why "agreed", not "agree"? Is it a contracted form of "have agreed" or the past simple? Is the form "agree" (I agree with you) acceptable too?
- prepositions - agreed to vs agreed on. Are they interchangeable . . .
Collins: The warring sides have agreed on an unconditional ceasefire All 100 senators agree to a postponement According to the definition, "agree to" implies "something to do", but they
- When to use is agreed? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
The bank balance is agreed with the bank statement I think this is grammatically incorrect It sounds a bit bothering The bank balance agrees agreed with the bank statement Does this one sound better? Anyone know which one is correct? When will we use is agreed? I think the subject-verb agreement is not correct in the first sentence
- prepositions - Which one sounds more natural: agree to a price or . . .
Which one sounds more natural: agree to a price or agree at a price? Here's some examples: We agreed at to the price with the customer, but then he changed his mind I offered $1000 for the car and she agreed to at that We agreed at to $100 for the job I have heard both used with the word "agree" but can't figure out which one is more correct and natural
- Have agreed or agree? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
"I have agreed" - is a past participle tense of it, and it means, that "I have done the act of the agreement sometime ago, in the past, and it is active valid up until now"; however I don't specify when that agreement took place "I agree" - is a "simple present tense" of it, and it means, that I agree, either in general, or in the specific moment
- I have read and agree agreed with the terms and conditions
Agree is in the present tense, while agreed is in the past tense Because of the use of have, read is in the past tense Normally when we form a sentence with two verbs, and elide the same auxiliary verb from the second verb, we make sure that both are in the same tense This isn't always essential, but it's a common consideration
- word usage - Why is agreed used as an interjection? - English . . .
A lot people use "agreed" as an interjection, especially while writing comments in blogs, forums, and other online platforms This use is also mentioned by different English dictionaries (e g Coll
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