How do you conjugate Study in present simple? –

How do you conjugate Study in the present simple?

  • I will have been studying.
  • you will have been studying.
  • he/she/it will have been studying.
  • we will have been studying.
  • you will have been studying.
  • they will have been studying.

When to use Study and studying?

«Study» is a noun which is often translated as «the study», and «I am studying» is a phrase which is often translated as «I am studying».

What is the regular verb of Study?

Study is a regular verb and its past tense is studied.

How do you say Study with ING?

1) The gerund of study is studying or studying?

How do you say Study in Present Perfect?

present-perfect

I have been studying you have been studying he/she/it has been studying we have been studying you have been studying

How do you say study in English in the present continuous?

Affirmative

Study : Present continuous I am studying I am studying You are studying You are studying He / She /It is studying He is studying We are studying We are studying

How do you write Stay in present continuous?

Continuous

Present Future he/she is staying will be staying we are staying will be staying you are staying will be staying they are staying will be staying

How do you answer short and long negative yes in the present continuous?

Affirmative

Short form Long form You are working You’re working He is working He’s working She is working She’s working It is working It’s working

How is the negative form structured in the present continuous?

To form the negative, you have to put a not after the verb to be: I am not sleeping very well lately. I’m not sleeping very well lately.

How do you answer a question with have and has?

Affirmative short answers in the present perfect are formed with Yes (Si) followed by a comma, the subject and have (I, You, We, They) or has (He, She, It). Have you worked for your uncle? Yes, I have.

How to answer a question with How many?

is an expression used to refer only in the interrogative form to countable nouns. To respond, non-specific partitives can be used such as: a lot (a lot), a few (a few), too many, (too many), or none (none), some (some).

When is the auxiliary did used?

What do we use the DID helper for? We use it for a simple, yet powerful reason: to form the correct structure of interrogative sentences and negative sentences in the past simple in English. So, its only use is to help us form the past simple (Go to the lesson on past simple).