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  1. Ive done all my homework. A beautiful young student standing outside

    i've done my homework

  2. I've Done My Homework

    i've done my homework

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  4. Have You Done Your Homework Concept Stock Image

    i've done my homework

  5. Unit 10 I've Done My Homework P1

    i've done my homework

  6. Have You Done Your Homework? Stock Photo by ©thinglass 35544501

    i've done my homework

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  1. Help me to done my homework 😭😭

COMMENTS

  1. Did vs. Done: Difference Explained (With Examples)

    For example, "I did my homework yesterday." On the other hand, done is the past participle form of "do" and needs a helper verb like "have" or "has". It's used when referring to actions that are completed, often without specifying when. An example would be, "I have done my homework."

  2. Which is correct: "I'm done" or "I have finished"?

    'I am done (with my work)' is a straggler from older English. In Old English, the present perfect was formed somewhat differently. Whereas Modern English uses to have in almost every construction, be it transitive or intransitive, older English used to have with transitive verbs and to be with intransitive verbs. Here are some intransitive examples:

  3. i have done my homework

    1. The New Yorker. "I've done my homework on this. 2. The New York Times. "I thought I had done my homework," Grace told him. 3. The New Yorker. I had done my homework and thought it all out, or so I thought.

  4. deverbal

    I am done (with this task) = I am finished (with this task), I have nothing more to do (with this task). This use of the past participles done and finish is called a deverbal, a verbform which has lost its 'verbiness'. This cannot be done with every verb, but some other verbs this has happened to are interest, ("I am interested in science ...

  5. sentence construction

    Mom, I'm done doing my homework! or. Mom, I'm done with my homework! In the first case, "doing my homework" is the task. In the second case, "homework" is the task. It depends on whether you regard 'homework' as a concrete noun - a collection of papers to be worked with in some way - or as an abstract noun - an assignment to be accomplished.

  6. Difference between past perfect and past simple with specified time

    The rule of thumb that I know about Perfect is that when you use perfect, it doesn't matter when the action was done but what matters is that it was done - the effect. So when I'm saying I've done my homework it doesn't matter WHEN I did my homework just the fact that I actually did it. However, what happens in that case: I've already done it ...

  7. Done my homework

    The done my homework construction involves a form of the word be, followed by the participle finished or done (or, for some speakers, started), followed by a noun phrase.(1) and (2) show two examples of this construction: 1) I'm done my homework. 2) I'm finished my homework. Note that the noun phrase does not have to be my homework.In fact, it can be almost any noun phrase, as shown by the ...

  8. What is the difference between "I've done" and "I'm ...

    Ask something else. Synonym for I've done I've = I have. You are saying "I have done something." In the I've done statement done is a verb; you are acting on something. I'm= I am. I'm done is more of a state of being so you are something. You are done with something either in action or thought.|I am done = I am finished = 終わりです ...

  9. Past simple or present perfect?

    I've lost my keys. We've been to a very nice restaurant. We use the past simple (NOT present perfect) when we mention or ask about when something happened or when the time is known by the speaker and the listener. We often use a past expression (last week, yesterday, when I was a child, etc.) We've arrived yesterday.

  10. Present Perfect for recently finished actions

    Just. Present Perfect is also used to talk about something recently finished. I have just done my homework: This means not so long ago you finished your homework. It is an unspecified time in the past. We don't know when the person did it, but it wasn't so long ago. It is usually used to stress that you finished the action and there it no ...

  11. I am done my work VS I am done with my work. [regional variation]

    Conversely, another thought is that "I've finished my homework" may sound prissy or stilted when there's a colloquial or dialect alternative available. Possibly the closeness of the sounds of "I'm done"/"I've done" helps this flip to go unnoticed or uncommented and grow in popularity, no matter which dialect. Apologies if this is a tedious ramble.

  12. I've done or I've made

    Hello, well, I'm in doubt, which one is correct in this situation: I've made all my homework I've done all my homework

  13. The Present Perfect Tense

    Present Perfect: I have done my homework - I've done my homework. Future Perfect: I will have done my homework - I'll have done my homework. Time Expressions One important thing to remember is when using the Perfect tense, we don't use specific time expressions to indicate when the action happened.

  14. difference

    20. Depending on context they could have the same or slightly different meanings. I have finished. would be said after completing a task either very recently or some time in the recent past. I am finished. would be said after very recently completing a task. It can also have the meaning of hopelessness as a person faces impending doom.

  15. When I do vs When I have done

    Exercises: 1 2 3. When I do vs When I have done. Exercise 1. Choose the correct verb forms to complete the sentences below. Use the PRESENT PERFECT when possible. 1 I'll ask Tony about it when I him. 2 The kids will have their snack while they their homework. 3 You won't get a pay rise until you here for at least a year.

  16. Which timeline illustrates "I have finished my homework" most

    No, I've got my homework to do. That's a pity: I've finished my homework, and I want to do something. doesn't necessarily mean that I have just now finished my homework: I might have, but it might be that I finished it this morning. The present relevance is that now I am in a state of having-finished-my-homework, whereas you are not in that state.

  17. Find your English sentence

    1. The New Yorker. "I've done my homework on this. 2. The New York Times. I say something along these lines to Welsh; code for look at me, I've done my homework. 3. The Guardian - Books. "You can tell me Islam is peaceful, but I've done my homework," he said, reeling off a list of Koranic citations.

  18. 【I've done with my homework 】 と 【I'm done with ...

    I've done my homework. Means: An action or a way conveying fact that you did your homework and it is settled now. "I am done my homework." This one is a bit grammatically incorrect. Add 'with' like this, "I am done with my homework" but then, the meaning is different now. It means you are frust with your homework, so you quit doing it.

  19. My work didn't save on my phone, lost hours worth of homework

    I've used Adobe for my math classes for a year now, and I've never had this kind of issue before, and I had no issues when I used drawings on 20 pages of math homework last week. The app didn't crash or anything, I finished my homework and then I closed out of the app, and I only opened it again about half an hour ago and saw that my work had ...

  20. The meaning of "Having done my homework I will go home."

    Have can be either a main verb (with several meanings, one of them is to posses something) or an auxiliary verb which is the case here. It doesn't have any meaning on its own; it is a part of grammatical construction called the perfect participle.. This construction is built with have in the -ing form + past participle. It is used to show that the first action was completed before the second.

  21. present perfect

    done my homework, I did/finished it done it, I did/finished my homework done my homework, I did/finished my homework done my homework, I did/finished my homework. and also. done it, I was done with it. and many others. (b) In [4], i is indeed grammatically defective: had better requires a complement.

  22. 차이점은 무엇 입니까? "I have done my homework ...

    I have done my homework의 동의어 First, you would have to say, "I am done with my homework" for the second sentence. Then, they both mean the same thing. The "to be + perfect passive participle" construction can only be used with certain verbs as well. For example, you can say, "I have completed my homework" (meaning the same as "I have done my homework"). However, you cannot say "I am ...