FAQ

Have informed vs informed?

Have informed vs informed?

I have already informed Mr Bloom of my decision. Here too, however, I have already informed Parliament several times that we intend to work on these next year.

Was informed has been informed?

Using ‘were informed’ tells that the action happened in the past. It’s already completed. ‘Had been informed’-stresses the fact of being informed’,in this case the time of being informed is irrelevant.

What is an example of inform?

To inform is defined as to tell, give knowledge or information. An example of to inform is someone telling a friend what time they’ll arrive. To disclose confidential or incriminating information to an authority. The defendant informed against the other members of the ring.

What is a sentence for informed?

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Sentence examples for he has informed from inspiring English sources. She greets the news that he has informed Jenny of her problem with chilly contempt. “He has informed the organizers of that and cited personal reasons”. He has informed SafeSpace that he will not renew its lease when it expires in May.

What tense is have been informed?

ANSWER

Top – Indicative – Conditional – Subjunctive – Infinitive – Bottom
indicative present indicative past tense
I have been informed I had been informed
you have been informed you had been informed
he/she/it has been informed he/she/it had been informed

Is “I’ve already informed him yesterday” grammatically correct?

“I’ve already informed him yesterday” is not. This uses a tense (the present perfect) which is only used for actions connected with the present. We can’t use it when we a referring to time periods that have finished (yesterday, last week, last year, two minutes ago).

Which is correct I have already informed or I already informed?

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Both phrases are correct; “I have already informed” is in the present perfect tense, while “I already informed” is in the past. I have already informed. This is a formal way to say that you have already told someone something.

What is the correct construction of “I informed him”?

“I informed him” is the correct construction. I really don’t know why. “I replied TO him” but “I answered him”. I guess, reading books and having frequent conversations with someone who knows correct English will show you how to automatically and without thinking, reject an incorrect construction for the right one.

What does “I informed to him” mean?

——- REMEMBER ~ “I informed to him” – is an opening to the sentence, as it indicates a relay of 1+ reasons for something, why something is, etc. Think of it as giving a report. An easier way the partial sentence runs, reworded as the SAME = “I said to him” . . . I said to him WHAT???!!