Not exact matches
We could go on and provide numerous similar
examples, not just from the writings
of John, but from other New Testament authors as well, but we have
seen from just a couple
of examples that present participles in connection with perfect tense
verbs do not clearly indicate anything about the timing
of one compared to the other.
Teachers might use interactions between a child and puppets or other toys during which the child is asked to describe what they
see in a way that elicits a particular
verb tense — for
example having the child describe what a puppet is doing to stimulate use
of the third person.
Examples of utterances were «come sicuramente hai visto la vecchia sbarra la porta» where, depending on meaning, «vecchia» can be the subject
of the main
verb (sbarrare, to block) or an adjective qualifying the subject (sbarra, bar)(«As you for sure have
seen the old lady blocks the door» versus «As you for sure have
seen the old bar carries it»).
Examples of Behavioral
Verbs See how the verbs are used in Language Arts, Mathematics, Science, and Social Stu
Verbs See how the
verbs are used in Language Arts, Mathematics, Science, and Social Stu
verbs are used in Language Arts, Mathematics, Science, and Social Studies.
So, for
example, even if a superior repeatedly points out to the person that he should ditch the here - and - there words and other forms
of legalese (as The Lawyerist's Andy Mergendahl has advised here), or that nominalizations and buried
verbs should be reworked into active voice, or that Enclosed please find (PDF) is silly and should be stricken from all correspondence, a month or two later the superior will
see these legal - writing foibles in a letter, memorandum, or, worse, a brief filed with a court.
«Opened,» «ordered,» and «ensured» are all
examples of the active
verbs hiring managers like to
see in resumes.