Is the present continuous or simple with a passive form?
Why am having some trouble with the following
sentence: “Foundations like the Siemens Foundation, Bertelsmann Foundation, Robert Bosch Foundation and Telekom Foundation are strongly participating in the update of the schools in Germany and Berlin. If
a company is participating, it could be presented as an fact by the people participating in the competition. I was gonna write that they are involved but that would be a simple present passive form wouldn t it? What do you think about my last sentence? What is the best verb form?
What do you think of the change in the Microsoft Word?
What are some significant lessons that can be learned by students?
[This would probably be a comment, if I had enough points to comment. [That
the phrase “are strongly participating in the update of the schools” is just not idiomatic English. What’s the connection between a translation and translation? How do modifiers and referents interact and have different types of interactions, just like wine and food does? What are some things that do go together, some don’t. “Strongly” pairs with verbs of focused action: One exercises vigorously but pulls strongly I am a little confused about one of the words with strongly. I’ll start writing about this one now. Where
“participate” implies subsequently continued action and not ongoing process, the progressive form of the verb is not necessary to distinguish one-time act from one-time process. Should I move towards actualizing education?