When you are writing, you can use words that show if the events have already happened, are happening now or will happen in the future. The past tense is used for things that have already happened. He ...
It seemed just like the other day that I grabbed the Day One issue of 'The Times' on the July 18, 1984. It seemed just like the other day that I grabbed the Day One issue of 'The Times' on the July 18 ...
Early this spring, in Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc. v. Promega, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reviewed a district court opinion on the validity of an issued patent 1. The court ...
What do John Updike's Rabbit, Run, Muriel Spark's The Driver's Seat, Malcolm Bradbury's The History Man and Margaret Atwood's Surfacing have in common? They are all modern classics, and they are all ...
In “The Rupture Tense,” Jenny Xie looks at silence surrounding the Cultural Revolution and explores its lasting impact on her own family. By Srikanth Reddy When you purchase an independently reviewed ...
NARRATOR: Free biscuits? Who will fall for that? When we talk about things that haven’t happened yet we call it the future tense. We often use the word ‘will’ in front of a verb. Looks like you ‘will’ ...
However it is not the present that often draws the inquisitive scholar and connoisseur to the city. However it is not the present that often draws the inquisitive scholar and connoisseur to the city.