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Today is the perfect day, and topic, for a New Year resolution.
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Yes, and today had been the perfect example, she wanted to say.
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And beware, advertised ranges often are the maximum possible given perfect conditions.
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Group 4: Republic of Ireland v Cyprus: Well, a perfect weekend really.
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Today will offer perfect conditions, as the country takes to the roads.
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So then passive good is, as was said, either conservative or perfective.
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Not corruptive, privative, or destructive to the power of classical presbyteries, or single congregations; but rather perfective and conservative thereunto.
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Scientists will forever be lost in their own egos until they realize the absolute divine and perfective nature of God.
Usage of perfect tense in English
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Give me the verb 'to be,' potential mood, past perfecttense.
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Grammarians define the perfecttense as that which expresses an action completed in the past and of which the consequences remain in the present.
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The +Future PerfectTense+ expresses action to be completed at some specified future time.
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Perfecttense, indicative mood, 'I have found it!'
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PerfectTense-IfI have been, etc.
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Present PerfectTense-ActiveVoice
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Past PerfectTense-ActiveVoice
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Past PerfectTense-PassiveVoice
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Future PerfectTense-ActiveVoice
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Future PerfectTense-PassiveVoice
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"The subjunctive mood, past perfecttense of the verb 'to know.'"
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+The Future PerfectTense _expresses action or being to be completed at some future time+.
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"The Green Dwarf, a Tale of the PerfectTense," by the Lord Charles Albert Florian Wellesley.
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"Il n'est pas venu," she said ( perfecttense, third singular, he is not, or has not, come).
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"I have told you, haven't I, that 'I wrote' is the perfecttense, while 'I have written' is the imperfect tense."