Equivalents to the present tensePresent perfect continuous tense vs simple past tensethe simple present tense or the present continuous tense“Yet” with present perfect and simple presentdifferent tenses with everPresent perfect continues tense“Simple past” vs “present perfect” with 'ever'Function of “Just” and Current Relevance in Present Perfect TenseDifferent usage of “simple past tense” and “present perfect”Rule on how to turn flat infinitives into present-tense 3rd-person singularsCan we use present perfect with a specific time?

What are substitutions for coconut in curry?

What is the significance behind "40 days" that often appears in the Bible?

Why do passenger jet manufacturers design their planes with stall prevention systems?

Can I use USB data pins as power source

New passport but visa is in old (lost) passport

Are ETF trackers fundamentally better than individual stocks?

"of which" is correct here?

What did “the good wine” (τὸν καλὸν οἶνον) mean in John 2:10?

Equivalents to the present tense

The German vowel “a” changes to the English “i”

Are relativity and doppler effect related?

As a new Ubuntu desktop 18.04 LTS user, do I need to use ufw for a firewall or is iptables sufficient?

Why does energy conservation give me the wrong answer in this inelastic collision problem?

Have the tides ever turned twice on any open problem?

How to write cleanly even if my character uses expletive language?

How could an airship be repaired midflight?

Time travel from stationary position?

Describing a chess game in a novel

What options are left, if Britain cannot decide?

Happy pi day, everyone!

et qui - how do you really understand that kind of phraseology?

Why does overlay work only on the first tcolorbox?

Meme-controlled people

Shortcut for setting origin to vertex



Equivalents to the present tense


Present perfect continuous tense vs simple past tensethe simple present tense or the present continuous tense“Yet” with present perfect and simple presentdifferent tenses with everPresent perfect continues tense“Simple past” vs “present perfect” with 'ever'Function of “Just” and Current Relevance in Present Perfect TenseDifferent usage of “simple past tense” and “present perfect”Rule on how to turn flat infinitives into present-tense 3rd-person singularsCan we use present perfect with a specific time?













1
















Do this to avoid having to do the dishes.



Do this to not do the dishes.




I am not sure what tense the first sentence is, I feel it's in the simple present too, but I am not sure. Is there a temporal difference in meaning between the two? I feel the difference is that the first one implies doing the dishes is an obligation, but there doesn't seem to be a "temporal difference in meaning".










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    In the first sentence the avoid clause is an infinitival one, so no tense. Note that to is part of the clause. In the second, "to not do the dishes" is also an infinitival, but it is not a natural way of saying things. Stick with the first one.

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    @BillJ: Not exactly my position, but the mods / SO in general / some ELL users don't like "answers posted as comments", and are apparently cracking down on it. I think you've said just about everything there is to say about this one, but I at least don't want to flag this to the mods as "Should be an answer, not a comment". (Whatever - your move! :)

    – FumbleFingers
    2 hours ago












  • @repomomster To be clear, are you asking about the tense of the whole sentences, or just the clauses commencing with to?

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago












  • the whole sentence

    – repomonster
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @repomonster Ah, in that case they are imperatives.

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago















1
















Do this to avoid having to do the dishes.



Do this to not do the dishes.




I am not sure what tense the first sentence is, I feel it's in the simple present too, but I am not sure. Is there a temporal difference in meaning between the two? I feel the difference is that the first one implies doing the dishes is an obligation, but there doesn't seem to be a "temporal difference in meaning".










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    In the first sentence the avoid clause is an infinitival one, so no tense. Note that to is part of the clause. In the second, "to not do the dishes" is also an infinitival, but it is not a natural way of saying things. Stick with the first one.

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    @BillJ: Not exactly my position, but the mods / SO in general / some ELL users don't like "answers posted as comments", and are apparently cracking down on it. I think you've said just about everything there is to say about this one, but I at least don't want to flag this to the mods as "Should be an answer, not a comment". (Whatever - your move! :)

    – FumbleFingers
    2 hours ago












  • @repomomster To be clear, are you asking about the tense of the whole sentences, or just the clauses commencing with to?

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago












  • the whole sentence

    – repomonster
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @repomonster Ah, in that case they are imperatives.

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago













1












1








1









Do this to avoid having to do the dishes.



Do this to not do the dishes.




I am not sure what tense the first sentence is, I feel it's in the simple present too, but I am not sure. Is there a temporal difference in meaning between the two? I feel the difference is that the first one implies doing the dishes is an obligation, but there doesn't seem to be a "temporal difference in meaning".










share|improve this question

















Do this to avoid having to do the dishes.



Do this to not do the dishes.




I am not sure what tense the first sentence is, I feel it's in the simple present too, but I am not sure. Is there a temporal difference in meaning between the two? I feel the difference is that the first one implies doing the dishes is an obligation, but there doesn't seem to be a "temporal difference in meaning".







tense auxiliary-verbs do-support imperative-sentences






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 22 mins ago









Jasper

18.3k43670




18.3k43670










asked 3 hours ago









repomonsterrepomonster

1,099116




1,099116







  • 2





    In the first sentence the avoid clause is an infinitival one, so no tense. Note that to is part of the clause. In the second, "to not do the dishes" is also an infinitival, but it is not a natural way of saying things. Stick with the first one.

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    @BillJ: Not exactly my position, but the mods / SO in general / some ELL users don't like "answers posted as comments", and are apparently cracking down on it. I think you've said just about everything there is to say about this one, but I at least don't want to flag this to the mods as "Should be an answer, not a comment". (Whatever - your move! :)

    – FumbleFingers
    2 hours ago












  • @repomomster To be clear, are you asking about the tense of the whole sentences, or just the clauses commencing with to?

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago












  • the whole sentence

    – repomonster
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @repomonster Ah, in that case they are imperatives.

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago












  • 2





    In the first sentence the avoid clause is an infinitival one, so no tense. Note that to is part of the clause. In the second, "to not do the dishes" is also an infinitival, but it is not a natural way of saying things. Stick with the first one.

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    @BillJ: Not exactly my position, but the mods / SO in general / some ELL users don't like "answers posted as comments", and are apparently cracking down on it. I think you've said just about everything there is to say about this one, but I at least don't want to flag this to the mods as "Should be an answer, not a comment". (Whatever - your move! :)

    – FumbleFingers
    2 hours ago












  • @repomomster To be clear, are you asking about the tense of the whole sentences, or just the clauses commencing with to?

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago












  • the whole sentence

    – repomonster
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @repomonster Ah, in that case they are imperatives.

    – BillJ
    2 hours ago







2




2





In the first sentence the avoid clause is an infinitival one, so no tense. Note that to is part of the clause. In the second, "to not do the dishes" is also an infinitival, but it is not a natural way of saying things. Stick with the first one.

– BillJ
2 hours ago





In the first sentence the avoid clause is an infinitival one, so no tense. Note that to is part of the clause. In the second, "to not do the dishes" is also an infinitival, but it is not a natural way of saying things. Stick with the first one.

– BillJ
2 hours ago




2




2





@BillJ: Not exactly my position, but the mods / SO in general / some ELL users don't like "answers posted as comments", and are apparently cracking down on it. I think you've said just about everything there is to say about this one, but I at least don't want to flag this to the mods as "Should be an answer, not a comment". (Whatever - your move! :)

– FumbleFingers
2 hours ago






@BillJ: Not exactly my position, but the mods / SO in general / some ELL users don't like "answers posted as comments", and are apparently cracking down on it. I think you've said just about everything there is to say about this one, but I at least don't want to flag this to the mods as "Should be an answer, not a comment". (Whatever - your move! :)

– FumbleFingers
2 hours ago














@repomomster To be clear, are you asking about the tense of the whole sentences, or just the clauses commencing with to?

– BillJ
2 hours ago






@repomomster To be clear, are you asking about the tense of the whole sentences, or just the clauses commencing with to?

– BillJ
2 hours ago














the whole sentence

– repomonster
2 hours ago





the whole sentence

– repomonster
2 hours ago




1




1





@repomonster Ah, in that case they are imperatives.

– BillJ
2 hours ago





@repomonster Ah, in that case they are imperatives.

– BillJ
2 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















1














It's simple present imperative, just like the second. They just have the adverbial of purpose ("to...") phrased differently.



The first uses a catenative, where a verb takes another verb or verb phrase as its argument. Avoid is catenative, with having to do the dishes as its argument. To have here can also be described as a catenative verb, but it's easier to just think of it as a modal auxiliary showing obligation.



As a catenative, avoid takes a gerund or gerund phrase, representing the action that you are avoiding. That action is having to do the dishes. Thus, it is avoiding the obligation to do the dishes. You could simplify it by removing the explicit obligation:




Do this to avoid doing the dishes.




In all of these versions, the principal verb is the first do, and the other verbs - avoid, having, and the second do (whether it's negated or not) - are in non-finite forms, and have nothing to indicate time. Non-finite verbs can have indications of time, but often they do not. Thus, there is no difference in time between them - one simple expresses, with clarity, that doing 'this' will allow you to avoid the obligation to do the dishes. The other says that doing 'this' will allow you to not do the dishes. The eventual meaning is the same, the difference is there but is not of practical importance, and there is no difference in time between the two.






share|improve this answer






























    2














    ** EDIT **



    I see SamBC answered before me, and his answer is probably better and more accurate. Just adding this in case it includes anything of use.



    ** END EDIT **



    "Have to" is a fixed phrase meaning 'to be obligated [to do something in the infinitive]', so it is easiest to think of it as if it were a single verb rather than two words, when parsing.



    Consider this phrase:




    Why am I doing the dishes? Because I have to.




    For an English learner, it probably looks completely wrong. In effect the sentence is being ended by a floating auxiliary 'to' from a verb which isn't even included ('do' is being implied). But it is a very common English construction.



    In this case the verb "have to do" is in the gerund form. Why? Because it is following a verb which can be (and commonly is) followed by the gerund form.




    I avoid running for the bus.



    He wants to avoid doing his English grammar homework.




    Therefore, these sentences are equally correct:




    We all avoided having to do the dishes.



    You never avoid having to run for the bus.




    The tense of the sentence depends on the first verb: avoid. If avoid is present tense, then the sentence is present. If you said:




    I avoided having to do the dishes.




    then it would be past. In your sentence you have the present infinitive.






    share|improve this answer






























      1















      Do this to avoid having to do the dishes.



      Do this to not do the dishes.




      No, they are not simple present. These are both imperative clauses, which use the plain form of the verb and thus are tenseless, though finite.



      They both have embedded infinitival clauses functioning as purpose adjuncts, the first containing a further embedded gerund-participial clause as catenative complement of "avoid", which in turn contains a further embedded infinitival clause as catenative complement of "having".



      The second is quite unnatural. Stick with the first.






      share|improve this answer
























        Your Answer








        StackExchange.ready(function()
        var channelOptions =
        tags: "".split(" "),
        id: "481"
        ;
        initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

        StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
        // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
        if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
        StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
        createEditor();
        );

        else
        createEditor();

        );

        function createEditor()
        StackExchange.prepareEditor(
        heartbeatType: 'answer',
        autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
        convertImagesToLinks: false,
        noModals: true,
        showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
        reputationToPostImages: null,
        bindNavPrevention: true,
        postfix: "",
        imageUploader:
        brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
        contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
        allowUrls: true
        ,
        noCode: true, onDemand: true,
        discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
        ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
        );



        );













        draft saved

        draft discarded


















        StackExchange.ready(
        function ()
        StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f200853%2fequivalents-to-the-present-tense%23new-answer', 'question_page');

        );

        Post as a guest















        Required, but never shown

























        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        1














        It's simple present imperative, just like the second. They just have the adverbial of purpose ("to...") phrased differently.



        The first uses a catenative, where a verb takes another verb or verb phrase as its argument. Avoid is catenative, with having to do the dishes as its argument. To have here can also be described as a catenative verb, but it's easier to just think of it as a modal auxiliary showing obligation.



        As a catenative, avoid takes a gerund or gerund phrase, representing the action that you are avoiding. That action is having to do the dishes. Thus, it is avoiding the obligation to do the dishes. You could simplify it by removing the explicit obligation:




        Do this to avoid doing the dishes.




        In all of these versions, the principal verb is the first do, and the other verbs - avoid, having, and the second do (whether it's negated or not) - are in non-finite forms, and have nothing to indicate time. Non-finite verbs can have indications of time, but often they do not. Thus, there is no difference in time between them - one simple expresses, with clarity, that doing 'this' will allow you to avoid the obligation to do the dishes. The other says that doing 'this' will allow you to not do the dishes. The eventual meaning is the same, the difference is there but is not of practical importance, and there is no difference in time between the two.






        share|improve this answer



























          1














          It's simple present imperative, just like the second. They just have the adverbial of purpose ("to...") phrased differently.



          The first uses a catenative, where a verb takes another verb or verb phrase as its argument. Avoid is catenative, with having to do the dishes as its argument. To have here can also be described as a catenative verb, but it's easier to just think of it as a modal auxiliary showing obligation.



          As a catenative, avoid takes a gerund or gerund phrase, representing the action that you are avoiding. That action is having to do the dishes. Thus, it is avoiding the obligation to do the dishes. You could simplify it by removing the explicit obligation:




          Do this to avoid doing the dishes.




          In all of these versions, the principal verb is the first do, and the other verbs - avoid, having, and the second do (whether it's negated or not) - are in non-finite forms, and have nothing to indicate time. Non-finite verbs can have indications of time, but often they do not. Thus, there is no difference in time between them - one simple expresses, with clarity, that doing 'this' will allow you to avoid the obligation to do the dishes. The other says that doing 'this' will allow you to not do the dishes. The eventual meaning is the same, the difference is there but is not of practical importance, and there is no difference in time between the two.






          share|improve this answer

























            1












            1








            1







            It's simple present imperative, just like the second. They just have the adverbial of purpose ("to...") phrased differently.



            The first uses a catenative, where a verb takes another verb or verb phrase as its argument. Avoid is catenative, with having to do the dishes as its argument. To have here can also be described as a catenative verb, but it's easier to just think of it as a modal auxiliary showing obligation.



            As a catenative, avoid takes a gerund or gerund phrase, representing the action that you are avoiding. That action is having to do the dishes. Thus, it is avoiding the obligation to do the dishes. You could simplify it by removing the explicit obligation:




            Do this to avoid doing the dishes.




            In all of these versions, the principal verb is the first do, and the other verbs - avoid, having, and the second do (whether it's negated or not) - are in non-finite forms, and have nothing to indicate time. Non-finite verbs can have indications of time, but often they do not. Thus, there is no difference in time between them - one simple expresses, with clarity, that doing 'this' will allow you to avoid the obligation to do the dishes. The other says that doing 'this' will allow you to not do the dishes. The eventual meaning is the same, the difference is there but is not of practical importance, and there is no difference in time between the two.






            share|improve this answer













            It's simple present imperative, just like the second. They just have the adverbial of purpose ("to...") phrased differently.



            The first uses a catenative, where a verb takes another verb or verb phrase as its argument. Avoid is catenative, with having to do the dishes as its argument. To have here can also be described as a catenative verb, but it's easier to just think of it as a modal auxiliary showing obligation.



            As a catenative, avoid takes a gerund or gerund phrase, representing the action that you are avoiding. That action is having to do the dishes. Thus, it is avoiding the obligation to do the dishes. You could simplify it by removing the explicit obligation:




            Do this to avoid doing the dishes.




            In all of these versions, the principal verb is the first do, and the other verbs - avoid, having, and the second do (whether it's negated or not) - are in non-finite forms, and have nothing to indicate time. Non-finite verbs can have indications of time, but often they do not. Thus, there is no difference in time between them - one simple expresses, with clarity, that doing 'this' will allow you to avoid the obligation to do the dishes. The other says that doing 'this' will allow you to not do the dishes. The eventual meaning is the same, the difference is there but is not of practical importance, and there is no difference in time between the two.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 2 hours ago









            SamBCSamBC

            12k1545




            12k1545























                2














                ** EDIT **



                I see SamBC answered before me, and his answer is probably better and more accurate. Just adding this in case it includes anything of use.



                ** END EDIT **



                "Have to" is a fixed phrase meaning 'to be obligated [to do something in the infinitive]', so it is easiest to think of it as if it were a single verb rather than two words, when parsing.



                Consider this phrase:




                Why am I doing the dishes? Because I have to.




                For an English learner, it probably looks completely wrong. In effect the sentence is being ended by a floating auxiliary 'to' from a verb which isn't even included ('do' is being implied). But it is a very common English construction.



                In this case the verb "have to do" is in the gerund form. Why? Because it is following a verb which can be (and commonly is) followed by the gerund form.




                I avoid running for the bus.



                He wants to avoid doing his English grammar homework.




                Therefore, these sentences are equally correct:




                We all avoided having to do the dishes.



                You never avoid having to run for the bus.




                The tense of the sentence depends on the first verb: avoid. If avoid is present tense, then the sentence is present. If you said:




                I avoided having to do the dishes.




                then it would be past. In your sentence you have the present infinitive.






                share|improve this answer



























                  2














                  ** EDIT **



                  I see SamBC answered before me, and his answer is probably better and more accurate. Just adding this in case it includes anything of use.



                  ** END EDIT **



                  "Have to" is a fixed phrase meaning 'to be obligated [to do something in the infinitive]', so it is easiest to think of it as if it were a single verb rather than two words, when parsing.



                  Consider this phrase:




                  Why am I doing the dishes? Because I have to.




                  For an English learner, it probably looks completely wrong. In effect the sentence is being ended by a floating auxiliary 'to' from a verb which isn't even included ('do' is being implied). But it is a very common English construction.



                  In this case the verb "have to do" is in the gerund form. Why? Because it is following a verb which can be (and commonly is) followed by the gerund form.




                  I avoid running for the bus.



                  He wants to avoid doing his English grammar homework.




                  Therefore, these sentences are equally correct:




                  We all avoided having to do the dishes.



                  You never avoid having to run for the bus.




                  The tense of the sentence depends on the first verb: avoid. If avoid is present tense, then the sentence is present. If you said:




                  I avoided having to do the dishes.




                  then it would be past. In your sentence you have the present infinitive.






                  share|improve this answer

























                    2












                    2








                    2







                    ** EDIT **



                    I see SamBC answered before me, and his answer is probably better and more accurate. Just adding this in case it includes anything of use.



                    ** END EDIT **



                    "Have to" is a fixed phrase meaning 'to be obligated [to do something in the infinitive]', so it is easiest to think of it as if it were a single verb rather than two words, when parsing.



                    Consider this phrase:




                    Why am I doing the dishes? Because I have to.




                    For an English learner, it probably looks completely wrong. In effect the sentence is being ended by a floating auxiliary 'to' from a verb which isn't even included ('do' is being implied). But it is a very common English construction.



                    In this case the verb "have to do" is in the gerund form. Why? Because it is following a verb which can be (and commonly is) followed by the gerund form.




                    I avoid running for the bus.



                    He wants to avoid doing his English grammar homework.




                    Therefore, these sentences are equally correct:




                    We all avoided having to do the dishes.



                    You never avoid having to run for the bus.




                    The tense of the sentence depends on the first verb: avoid. If avoid is present tense, then the sentence is present. If you said:




                    I avoided having to do the dishes.




                    then it would be past. In your sentence you have the present infinitive.






                    share|improve this answer













                    ** EDIT **



                    I see SamBC answered before me, and his answer is probably better and more accurate. Just adding this in case it includes anything of use.



                    ** END EDIT **



                    "Have to" is a fixed phrase meaning 'to be obligated [to do something in the infinitive]', so it is easiest to think of it as if it were a single verb rather than two words, when parsing.



                    Consider this phrase:




                    Why am I doing the dishes? Because I have to.




                    For an English learner, it probably looks completely wrong. In effect the sentence is being ended by a floating auxiliary 'to' from a verb which isn't even included ('do' is being implied). But it is a very common English construction.



                    In this case the verb "have to do" is in the gerund form. Why? Because it is following a verb which can be (and commonly is) followed by the gerund form.




                    I avoid running for the bus.



                    He wants to avoid doing his English grammar homework.




                    Therefore, these sentences are equally correct:




                    We all avoided having to do the dishes.



                    You never avoid having to run for the bus.




                    The tense of the sentence depends on the first verb: avoid. If avoid is present tense, then the sentence is present. If you said:




                    I avoided having to do the dishes.




                    then it would be past. In your sentence you have the present infinitive.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 2 hours ago









                    fred2fred2

                    3,002719




                    3,002719





















                        1















                        Do this to avoid having to do the dishes.



                        Do this to not do the dishes.




                        No, they are not simple present. These are both imperative clauses, which use the plain form of the verb and thus are tenseless, though finite.



                        They both have embedded infinitival clauses functioning as purpose adjuncts, the first containing a further embedded gerund-participial clause as catenative complement of "avoid", which in turn contains a further embedded infinitival clause as catenative complement of "having".



                        The second is quite unnatural. Stick with the first.






                        share|improve this answer





























                          1















                          Do this to avoid having to do the dishes.



                          Do this to not do the dishes.




                          No, they are not simple present. These are both imperative clauses, which use the plain form of the verb and thus are tenseless, though finite.



                          They both have embedded infinitival clauses functioning as purpose adjuncts, the first containing a further embedded gerund-participial clause as catenative complement of "avoid", which in turn contains a further embedded infinitival clause as catenative complement of "having".



                          The second is quite unnatural. Stick with the first.






                          share|improve this answer



























                            1












                            1








                            1








                            Do this to avoid having to do the dishes.



                            Do this to not do the dishes.




                            No, they are not simple present. These are both imperative clauses, which use the plain form of the verb and thus are tenseless, though finite.



                            They both have embedded infinitival clauses functioning as purpose adjuncts, the first containing a further embedded gerund-participial clause as catenative complement of "avoid", which in turn contains a further embedded infinitival clause as catenative complement of "having".



                            The second is quite unnatural. Stick with the first.






                            share|improve this answer
















                            Do this to avoid having to do the dishes.



                            Do this to not do the dishes.




                            No, they are not simple present. These are both imperative clauses, which use the plain form of the verb and thus are tenseless, though finite.



                            They both have embedded infinitival clauses functioning as purpose adjuncts, the first containing a further embedded gerund-participial clause as catenative complement of "avoid", which in turn contains a further embedded infinitival clause as catenative complement of "having".



                            The second is quite unnatural. Stick with the first.







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited 2 hours ago

























                            answered 2 hours ago









                            BillJBillJ

                            6,5731719




                            6,5731719



























                                draft saved

                                draft discarded
















































                                Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language Learners Stack Exchange!


                                • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                But avoid


                                • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                                To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                draft saved


                                draft discarded














                                StackExchange.ready(
                                function ()
                                StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f200853%2fequivalents-to-the-present-tense%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                                );

                                Post as a guest















                                Required, but never shown





















































                                Required, but never shown














                                Required, but never shown












                                Required, but never shown







                                Required, but never shown

































                                Required, but never shown














                                Required, but never shown












                                Required, but never shown







                                Required, but never shown







                                Popular posts from this blog

                                Jet Time Laivasto | Lähteet | Aiheesta muualla | NavigointivalikkoJet Time - The CompanyThe CompanyManagementJet Time aloittaa lauantaina Suomi-rekisterissä olevalla Boeing 737 -koneellaJettime Finland Fleet Details and HistoryJettime Fleet Details and HistoryRegional Jet OÜ takes over ATR production for SASJet Time Returns To Its Core BusinessYhtiön kotisivutlaajentamalla

                                Olympian arkeologinen museo Sisällysluettelo Historia ja rakennus | Kokoelmat | Lähteet | Aiheesta muualla | Navigointivalikko37°38′36″N, 21°37′46″EInfobox OKArchaeological Museum of Olympia: HistoryArchaeological Museum of Olympia: DescriptionΜουσείο Ιστορίας των Ολυμπιακών Αγώνων της Αρχαιότητας: ΙστορικόArchaeological Museum of Olympia

                                Äpy Sisällysluettelo Äpyt kautta historian | Esimerkkejä Äpy-huumorista | Katso myös | Kirjallisuutta | Aiheesta muualla | Navigointivalikkowww.äpy.fi