sayantanc2k wrote:
alpham wrote:
I chose answer choice D however it now makes sense why it distorts the meaning of the sentence.
Can anyone verify that when you have a time marker such as 'before' you don't have to have the sentence in perfect tense. I'm pretty sure it can go either way.
Can anyone verify that when you have a time marker such as 'before' you don't have to have the sentence in perfect tense. I'm pretty sure it can go either way.
Manhattan SC guide states that use of words such as "after" / " before" makes the use of past perfect unnecessary - following is an excerpt from the book:
Right: Laura LOCKED the deadbolt before T for
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