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  • Exist or Exists? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    where to exist is an infinitive phrase, or The application exists in the codebase where exists is the
  • Is it exist or exists? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    Future: The file will still exist tomorrow The file is deprecated and will not exist in the next release The file might exist in the future How long the file exists is up to you How long the file will exist is up to the user Example: A file which exists today, has existed for 137 days It will probably exist for another 10 years
  • Which word is correct, existed, existent or existing?
    The word exist is an intransitive verb, so we don't use it in the passive voice, and we also don't use existed as an adjective This rules out existed Both existing and existent could be used with something that exists, to refer to the state of existing (or existence)
  • grammar - Using There exist exists with and - English Language . . .
    There are no conditions to it You could use either of it In the practical world, psychologically(But I haven't any proves neither there are survey or tests on it), you could use "There exists a number and two distinct elements" to make it look singular
  • exist vs. there are - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    Things that exist currently or don't exist currently are subject to change But once something exists and will continue to exist, we don't say "currently" There are currently 50 states With Puerto Rico, it could be 51 Yes The United States is currently between Canada and Mexico No –
  • Which is correct in spoken language, not exist or not exists?
    "<something> don't exist" is not Standard English As TRIG pointed out, this should be "<something> doesn't exist", because <something> is singular "something exists" is correct "Ain't no such thing" is common in spoken English, but "Ain't" is not in Standard English (Also, this use of a double negative is incorrect per Standard English )
  • word usage - “file doesn’t exist” or “file doesn’t exists” - English . . .
    That file doesn't exist In any verb construction (auxiliaries + lexical verb) only the first is inflected for tense, person and number In your example does is the first verb in the construction does exist Auxiliary do always takes an infinitive (plain) form as its complement: exist
  • meaning - Can anachronism mean something that didnt exist at the . . .
    I am wondering if anachronism can mean "opposite" of the above, that is, something that appears in a historical drama but didn't exist at that time (like, though not a good example, a cell phone being used in a movie set in the 1980s) Cambridge definition seems to say yes, or looks like even says that it is more frequent:


















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