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  1. Ate is the preterite conjugation of eat and is used when conjugating without the verbs "do" or "have" (therefore, you do not use "ate" when asking a question, only when stating a fact). Examples: "I ate that." "We ate your food, Blake."

  2. 6. haven't eaten is correct. This is the present perfect form, which in this case describes an action or state occurring in the present or recent past. For example: I have just eaten the salad. I haven't eaten the sandwich. On the other hand ate is the simple past form, so a helper verb cannot be used.

  3. Jan 17, 2017 · 125. It's a children's joke, nothing more. It's certainly not something one would encounter in everyday conversation. The number pattern 7, 8, 9 sounds identical to seven ate nine in spoken form. A similar joke is depicted here: Fun fact: The Turkish word for 7 ("yedi") is the same as the Turkish word for "ate".

  4. Jan 16, 2021 · Nouns ending in -ate are usually pronounced /-ət/, for example, chocolate, climate, advocate, estimate etc. Adjectives ending in -ate are usually pronounced with /-ət/, for example, legitimate, approximate, appropriate etc. Now some adjectives and nouns I listed above can also be used as verbs, in which case, they're pronounced with /-eɪt/.

  5. So in number (1) we do not need to use the past perfect at all. We could just use the past simple: I ate a pound of chocolate before I ate my dinner. In the second sentence, where it would be unclear which happened first, the chocolate or the dinner, the past perfect is appropriate-assuming that the chocolate eating happened before the dinner did.

  6. Jan 2, 2016 · By saying "I have eaten lunch", you indicate that you already ate lunch during today's time interval for eating lunch. (You would probably say "I ate lunch" if someone asks you at 3:30 p.m., long after the usual time interval for eating lunch.)

  7. Jan 20, 2023 · 1. "Ate" is the past tense. It is used to talk about events that occurred at a particular time in the past. The horse ate an apple yesterday. Using "eaten" would be a mistake: *The horse eaten an apple yesterday (grammar error, no meaning) "Eaten" is a participle. It has many different uses.

  8. Nov 9, 2019 · At an indefinite time in the past (e.g., we have talked before), or. Began in the past and continued to the present time (e.g., he has grown impatient over the last hour). The reference is the present day. This tense is formed by have/has + the past participle. "eaten" is a past participle--not a verb. Share.

  9. デモ申し込み. English. 評価検証のテクニカル・アドバイザー. 各種の半導体試験・検査の要求に、. 最適な機器及びソフトウェア等と. ユニークなサポートを提供します。. 半導体の試験・検査機器等を利用する業界において、実際に半導体の試験・検査機器を ...

  10. Mar 8, 2020 · 1. The difference is that first modifies "whole" and the second modifies "ate". If you say "Almost the whole" that means "nearly complete". It would mean "most of the fish. But If you say "I almost ate"... this suggests that you were close to starting to eat. There was a worm in my apple and I almost ate it!

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