1
Points
Questions
0
Answers
204
-
Asked on April 3, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 1, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 1, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes