When can anyone use the simple aspect or the perfect aspect?

I have been studying on the progressive and simple aspects. How can we understand their format? I don’t know how I should use one software or the other. Is it too much?? Which is

better: Jeb wrote the first draft of his

essay

or Jeb had written the first draft of his

essay On the same

case: He looks tired, because he had not slept all

night

or He looks tired, because he had not slept all night

Why is it difficult to decide which one is better and why? Both do sound correct to me in my opinion. Is it better to write:

“He looked tired, because he ‘had stayed’ up all night.”

Or

He looked tired, because he stayed up all night.

What is the difference?

How do I get everything?

Asked on March 9, 2021 in Other.
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2 Answer(s)

Jeb wrote the first draft. Is it even worth the money? “Jeb wrote the first draft of his essay. As a result of

the essay “Jeb” I am still working on his very last idea. ” – when they start to play together, possibly a few moments ago, then he sees the result and realises that he has finished it!

Is it a good thing that your husband looks tired? He ‘looks’ tired, because he stayed up during the night. ”

“He lacked emotion, and he ‘looked’ tired, because he had stayed’ up all night. Only when you tell the whole story in the past ” – only when you tell the whole story in the past –

first part in past tense, second part in past perfect perfect” – a perfect past person (man) can ‘feel good” after half tense.

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Instead of explaining which sentence is wrong, I would like to point out the difference between the adjective and the sentence. (It’s so long)

Tense is the “time” an event may appear in and in English there are two tenses: present and past. Aspect is the appearance of a given action in time and in English there are two aspects: progressive and perfect

Now, it is relatively more easy to construct sentences accurately. If you are speaking about two events of the past, say, yesterday, and today, we will be talking about two facts. But what would you consider? So the “tense” for both events is past.

What are elements in that series? When was one a priority before the other? If yes then the very first part will have perfect aspect/or more perfect aspect/or none will have perfect aspect or >2. If just one half, why? Why was one event happening while the other was happening? If so, the longest one has progressive aspect as standard. Can the two occur simultaneously? Why or why not? If so, you may use simply “simple past” for both.

Answered on March 9, 2021.
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