Study

DB3 - DAY 7

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  • Where does yet normally go in a sentence?
    At the beginning of the sentence
    Between have and the past participle
    Before the main verb
    At the end of the sentence
  • Which sentence is NOT correct?
    She has already written the report.
    Have you cleaned your room yet?
    I haven’t eaten yet.
    I haven’t eaten already.
  • “I haven’t finished yet” means:
    the action was finished a long time ago
    the action is not complete at the moment
    the action wasn't finished a long time ago
    the action is finished at the moment
  • Which sentence is correct?
    I have seen this movie yesterday.
    I’ve already seen this movie.
    I already saw this movie.
    I have already seen this movie last week.
  • Which sentence should use yet, NOT already?
    He has arrived at the office.
    I’ve booked the tickets.
    Have you done your homework?
    She has sent the email.
  • Which sentence shows surprise?
    You already finish your work?
    You’ve already finished your work?
    Did you finish your work yet?
    Have you finished your work yet?
  • “He’s already left” suggests that:
    he is leaving now
    he left yesterday
    he will leave soon
    he left earlier than expected
  • We usually use yet:
    in affirmative sentences
    in negative sentences and questions
    in past simple sentences
    with specific past time expressions
  • We use already in the present perfect mainly to show that:
    something happened long ago
    something will happen in the future
    something is happening now
    something is complete, often earlier than expected
  • Why can’t we say “I’ve already seen this movie last week”?
    Last week refers to the future
    The verb form is wrong
    Present perfect cannot be used with past time expressions
    Already cannot be used with movies