I have tried to find something about it, but i am sti. There have been endless discussions about simple past vs. You tried and you did try i have always used tried but then i heard did try in some film.
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1) have you tried the pills i got you?
1) tried 2) had tried 3) have tried 4) am trying the last 2 answers are obviously wrong so which one is it, tried or had tried?
(3) i've tried but it hasn't worked. The answer key says it should be had tried, is that correct? You can say that someone tried something or that something. He has been trying, which is a present perfect continuous, and he has tried, which is the present perfect tense, do have a slight difference, and present perfect continuous is often used by native speakers to.
What is the difference between these sentences? Perfect tense and whether or not it's a transatlantic difference. (or could imply that) whereas i tried to help you yesterday is much more specific and only refers to a single instance of help. Sentence (1) (not in the question) suggests that a single trial was made.
Is it more common to use the first sentence if it's pills taken daily for a long term effect, or would the sentences be.
Given that situation, which of the following sentences is correct? I've tried to help you implies you've tried to help them more than once, i think. 1) will is the future and tried is the past, so they don't go together. 2) you can't use tried in the passive sense like that.
2 i was trying to run the computer program, but it didn't work. 2) did you try the pills i got you? I have tried that, i had tried that or i did try that? 1 i tried to run the computer program, but it didn't work.
Note that i'm referring to something that happened before something else that's also in.
This is probably what you want and is the simplest form.