Perfect Usage of “Never”usage of 'never again'“How long have you [had/been having] this?” - Cont. or Simple?Past perfect usage?Usage of the perfect gerundIs the “for + proposition” form still used nowadays?A good and exhaustive book for English grammarpresent perfect tense usage“I am having…”Yet another question about the usage of 'lest'Usage of Past Perfect Tense
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Perfect Usage of “Never”
usage of 'never again'“How long have you [had/been having] this?” - Cont. or Simple?Past perfect usage?Usage of the perfect gerundIs the “for + proposition” form still used nowadays?A good and exhaustive book for English grammarpresent perfect tense usage“I am having…”Yet another question about the usage of 'lest'Usage of Past Perfect Tense
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
While I was reading a quiz, I found the following choice question:
She never (do - does - did) her homework at school.
Since my native language is not English and I am still in the very beginning way to studying English, I found that "never" can be used in Present Simple Tense as well as Past Simple Tense and other tenses, but I am still unsure whether this one can be a multiple choice question or there is a matter of preference here. I really couldn't make my mind up.
Could you, please, help, friends?
Thanks in Advance,
Yusuf Ali
grammar
New contributor
add a comment |
While I was reading a quiz, I found the following choice question:
She never (do - does - did) her homework at school.
Since my native language is not English and I am still in the very beginning way to studying English, I found that "never" can be used in Present Simple Tense as well as Past Simple Tense and other tenses, but I am still unsure whether this one can be a multiple choice question or there is a matter of preference here. I really couldn't make my mind up.
Could you, please, help, friends?
Thanks in Advance,
Yusuf Ali
grammar
New contributor
add a comment |
While I was reading a quiz, I found the following choice question:
She never (do - does - did) her homework at school.
Since my native language is not English and I am still in the very beginning way to studying English, I found that "never" can be used in Present Simple Tense as well as Past Simple Tense and other tenses, but I am still unsure whether this one can be a multiple choice question or there is a matter of preference here. I really couldn't make my mind up.
Could you, please, help, friends?
Thanks in Advance,
Yusuf Ali
grammar
New contributor
While I was reading a quiz, I found the following choice question:
She never (do - does - did) her homework at school.
Since my native language is not English and I am still in the very beginning way to studying English, I found that "never" can be used in Present Simple Tense as well as Past Simple Tense and other tenses, but I am still unsure whether this one can be a multiple choice question or there is a matter of preference here. I really couldn't make my mind up.
Could you, please, help, friends?
Thanks in Advance,
Yusuf Ali
grammar
grammar
New contributor
New contributor
edited 7 hours ago
Yusuf Alquiadi
New contributor
asked 8 hours ago
Yusuf AlquiadiYusuf Alquiadi
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12
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New contributor
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1 Answer
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A good multiple choice question should have at least one wrong answer. The wrong one here is 'Do'. The sentence there would be: She does not do her homework at school. A different form of never rather than does. The other choices could be used for tenses you mention.
New contributor
2
I'd have said good multiple choice question should have exactly one right answer. Unless associated instructions made it clear the task was to identify the one and only "wrong" answer.
– FumbleFingers
7 hours ago
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A good multiple choice question should have at least one wrong answer. The wrong one here is 'Do'. The sentence there would be: She does not do her homework at school. A different form of never rather than does. The other choices could be used for tenses you mention.
New contributor
2
I'd have said good multiple choice question should have exactly one right answer. Unless associated instructions made it clear the task was to identify the one and only "wrong" answer.
– FumbleFingers
7 hours ago
add a comment |
A good multiple choice question should have at least one wrong answer. The wrong one here is 'Do'. The sentence there would be: She does not do her homework at school. A different form of never rather than does. The other choices could be used for tenses you mention.
New contributor
2
I'd have said good multiple choice question should have exactly one right answer. Unless associated instructions made it clear the task was to identify the one and only "wrong" answer.
– FumbleFingers
7 hours ago
add a comment |
A good multiple choice question should have at least one wrong answer. The wrong one here is 'Do'. The sentence there would be: She does not do her homework at school. A different form of never rather than does. The other choices could be used for tenses you mention.
New contributor
A good multiple choice question should have at least one wrong answer. The wrong one here is 'Do'. The sentence there would be: She does not do her homework at school. A different form of never rather than does. The other choices could be used for tenses you mention.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 7 hours ago
ElliotElliot
1
1
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2
I'd have said good multiple choice question should have exactly one right answer. Unless associated instructions made it clear the task was to identify the one and only "wrong" answer.
– FumbleFingers
7 hours ago
add a comment |
2
I'd have said good multiple choice question should have exactly one right answer. Unless associated instructions made it clear the task was to identify the one and only "wrong" answer.
– FumbleFingers
7 hours ago
2
2
I'd have said good multiple choice question should have exactly one right answer. Unless associated instructions made it clear the task was to identify the one and only "wrong" answer.
– FumbleFingers
7 hours ago
I'd have said good multiple choice question should have exactly one right answer. Unless associated instructions made it clear the task was to identify the one and only "wrong" answer.
– FumbleFingers
7 hours ago
add a comment |
Yusuf Alquiadi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Yusuf Alquiadi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Yusuf Alquiadi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Yusuf Alquiadi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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