tense - recently with present perfect and past - English Language . . . The "simple past tense" is often used to describe situations that have occurred in the past The present-perfect construction has within it two tenses: a primary present-tense, and a secondary past-tense (the perfect) And so, the present-perfect can be used to involve two time spheres: the past time and the present time; and it is often used to describe a situation that has happened, or has
present tense - now I decide, now I decided, now I have decided . . . As I understand it, Past Simple (the second sentence) is possible here only as the simplest version of Present Perfect (the third sentence), isn't it? But why is Present Perfect more common here than Present Simple?
Is from simple to complex grammatically correct I often read the phrase "from simple to complex" and wonder if it is grammatically correct The reason for the doubt is that "simple" and "complex" are adjectives and
Differences between onward, forth, ahead, front, fore, forward They differ in meaning, and in register The simplest words in your list are ahead, front and forward Forward usually indicates a motion: "Move forward" Front is a side of something, It doesn't usually indicate a motion: "The front of the house" Ahead means "to the front of" You can say "move ahead of me" to mean "overtake" As with many common words, there is overlap, and secondary meanings
sentence choice - Which one is correct, Taking day off Monday or . . . Neither is correct You can say "I'm taking Monday off " That is the simplest expression You can also say "I'm taking a day off on Monday " or "I'm taking the day off on Monday" If you use "the", it suggests that you are thinking only of Monday If you use "a", it might mean that you have multiple days off available, and you are using just one of them
ellipsis - Should I use neither one, none of them or neither one . . . Is she beautiful or smart or none? The duplicate question does not answer my question My question is not about single plural verb harmony It is about whether I can omit and if so to what extent I can omit to give the same meaning in simplest way and that according to what one prefers neither over none or vice versa