FAQ

Have visited or have been visited?

Have visited or have been visited?

“websites I have visited” suggests that you have finished visiting websites, so there is no connection with now. “websites I have been visiting” suggests that you are continuing to visit websites.

Have been working or has been working?

‘Is working’ is the present continuous form of a verb which indicates that the action is being performed at the present. ‘Has been working ‘ is the present perfect continuous form of the verb which explains that an action is being performed for some time and is not over.

What is the verb 3 of visit?

Visit Past Simple, Simple Past Tense of Visit Past Participle, V1 V2 V3 Form Of Visit

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V1 V2 V3
Visit Visited Visited

How do you use the word had visited in a sentence?

You can use “had visited” only if you are going on to say what you have done since then. “Had visited” implies a more remote past. “I had already visited the zoo ten years ago, but I went again yesterday.”. “I’ve visited the zoo yesterday” is also incorrect.

Is it correct to say I visited the Doctor this past week?

Here, “this past week” refers to an event that clearly occurred in the past. Therefore, the event itself (visiting the doctor) must take “the past simple tense”. Hence, it would be right to express yourself in the following way. I visited the doctor this past week.

What is the difference between “I’ve visited the zoo” and ‘I have visited’?

“Had visited” implies a more remote past. “I had already visited the zoo ten years ago, but I went again yesterday.” “I’ve visited the zoo yesterday” is also incorrect. “I have visited” is a general statement about your experiences and can’t be tied to one specific time.

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Is it correct to say ‘three years back’?

Back in the ’70s, disco music was very popular. She had a minor operation a few years back. Things were different back then. However, people on various other websites {eg massromantic at WordReference } consider ‘three years back’ less formal than ‘three years ago’, and I’d agree with them, especially for British usage: