I'm not sure about this exercise [on hold]
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While I was doing my homeworks a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise.
"It (to snow) ...... in the mountains at Christmas"
It is an exercise about future tenses (I can use only Present Continuous, Present Simple, Simple Future, "be going to") but on this sentence I'm unsure of what tense to use. I thought about Simple Future but maybe it could be a "Be Going to" future.
grammar questions future
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put on hold as off-topic by Jason Bassford, Hot Licks, TrevorD, Cascabel, DJClayworth 2 days ago
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Jason Bassford, Cascabel, DJClayworth
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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While I was doing my homeworks a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise.
"It (to snow) ...... in the mountains at Christmas"
It is an exercise about future tenses (I can use only Present Continuous, Present Simple, Simple Future, "be going to") but on this sentence I'm unsure of what tense to use. I thought about Simple Future but maybe it could be a "Be Going to" future.
grammar questions future
New contributor
put on hold as off-topic by Jason Bassford, Hot Licks, TrevorD, Cascabel, DJClayworth 2 days ago
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Jason Bassford, Cascabel, DJClayworth
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
There are several 'tenses' that could fill the gap: was snowing, snowed, snows, will snow, will be snowing, is going to snow etc. So unfortunately your question is unanswerable as it stands. What was the task instruction? Is it an exercise to practice future forms?
– Shoe
2 days ago
1. The purpose of this site is NOT to do your homework for you. 2. It appears that you are learning English, in which case out sister site English Language Learners would probably be more suited to your questions.
– TrevorD
2 days ago
BTW... homework is a non-count noun in English.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
@Cascabel And your point is ...?
– TrevorD
2 days ago
Erm...@TrevorD Read the first sentence: "While I was doing my "homeworks" a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise." It's a common L1-L2 confusion especially when the L1 is Spanish or some other Romance language. Also, "came up to mind" is an incorrect use of the idiom.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
|
show 1 more comment
While I was doing my homeworks a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise.
"It (to snow) ...... in the mountains at Christmas"
It is an exercise about future tenses (I can use only Present Continuous, Present Simple, Simple Future, "be going to") but on this sentence I'm unsure of what tense to use. I thought about Simple Future but maybe it could be a "Be Going to" future.
grammar questions future
New contributor
While I was doing my homeworks a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise.
"It (to snow) ...... in the mountains at Christmas"
It is an exercise about future tenses (I can use only Present Continuous, Present Simple, Simple Future, "be going to") but on this sentence I'm unsure of what tense to use. I thought about Simple Future but maybe it could be a "Be Going to" future.
grammar questions future
grammar questions future
New contributor
New contributor
edited 2 days ago
UrlanMobis
New contributor
asked 2 days ago
UrlanMobisUrlanMobis
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New contributor
New contributor
put on hold as off-topic by Jason Bassford, Hot Licks, TrevorD, Cascabel, DJClayworth 2 days ago
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Jason Bassford, Cascabel, DJClayworth
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
put on hold as off-topic by Jason Bassford, Hot Licks, TrevorD, Cascabel, DJClayworth 2 days ago
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better. Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic." – Jason Bassford, Cascabel, DJClayworth
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
There are several 'tenses' that could fill the gap: was snowing, snowed, snows, will snow, will be snowing, is going to snow etc. So unfortunately your question is unanswerable as it stands. What was the task instruction? Is it an exercise to practice future forms?
– Shoe
2 days ago
1. The purpose of this site is NOT to do your homework for you. 2. It appears that you are learning English, in which case out sister site English Language Learners would probably be more suited to your questions.
– TrevorD
2 days ago
BTW... homework is a non-count noun in English.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
@Cascabel And your point is ...?
– TrevorD
2 days ago
Erm...@TrevorD Read the first sentence: "While I was doing my "homeworks" a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise." It's a common L1-L2 confusion especially when the L1 is Spanish or some other Romance language. Also, "came up to mind" is an incorrect use of the idiom.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
|
show 1 more comment
There are several 'tenses' that could fill the gap: was snowing, snowed, snows, will snow, will be snowing, is going to snow etc. So unfortunately your question is unanswerable as it stands. What was the task instruction? Is it an exercise to practice future forms?
– Shoe
2 days ago
1. The purpose of this site is NOT to do your homework for you. 2. It appears that you are learning English, in which case out sister site English Language Learners would probably be more suited to your questions.
– TrevorD
2 days ago
BTW... homework is a non-count noun in English.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
@Cascabel And your point is ...?
– TrevorD
2 days ago
Erm...@TrevorD Read the first sentence: "While I was doing my "homeworks" a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise." It's a common L1-L2 confusion especially when the L1 is Spanish or some other Romance language. Also, "came up to mind" is an incorrect use of the idiom.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
There are several 'tenses' that could fill the gap: was snowing, snowed, snows, will snow, will be snowing, is going to snow etc. So unfortunately your question is unanswerable as it stands. What was the task instruction? Is it an exercise to practice future forms?
– Shoe
2 days ago
There are several 'tenses' that could fill the gap: was snowing, snowed, snows, will snow, will be snowing, is going to snow etc. So unfortunately your question is unanswerable as it stands. What was the task instruction? Is it an exercise to practice future forms?
– Shoe
2 days ago
1. The purpose of this site is NOT to do your homework for you. 2. It appears that you are learning English, in which case out sister site English Language Learners would probably be more suited to your questions.
– TrevorD
2 days ago
1. The purpose of this site is NOT to do your homework for you. 2. It appears that you are learning English, in which case out sister site English Language Learners would probably be more suited to your questions.
– TrevorD
2 days ago
BTW... homework is a non-count noun in English.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
BTW... homework is a non-count noun in English.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
@Cascabel And your point is ...?
– TrevorD
2 days ago
@Cascabel And your point is ...?
– TrevorD
2 days ago
Erm...@TrevorD Read the first sentence: "While I was doing my "homeworks" a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise." It's a common L1-L2 confusion especially when the L1 is Spanish or some other Romance language. Also, "came up to mind" is an incorrect use of the idiom.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
Erm...@TrevorD Read the first sentence: "While I was doing my "homeworks" a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise." It's a common L1-L2 confusion especially when the L1 is Spanish or some other Romance language. Also, "came up to mind" is an incorrect use of the idiom.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
|
show 1 more comment
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There are several 'tenses' that could fill the gap: was snowing, snowed, snows, will snow, will be snowing, is going to snow etc. So unfortunately your question is unanswerable as it stands. What was the task instruction? Is it an exercise to practice future forms?
– Shoe
2 days ago
1. The purpose of this site is NOT to do your homework for you. 2. It appears that you are learning English, in which case out sister site English Language Learners would probably be more suited to your questions.
– TrevorD
2 days ago
BTW... homework is a non-count noun in English.
– Cascabel
2 days ago
@Cascabel And your point is ...?
– TrevorD
2 days ago
Erm...@TrevorD Read the first sentence: "While I was doing my "homeworks" a question came up to my mind when I looked to this exercise." It's a common L1-L2 confusion especially when the L1 is Spanish or some other Romance language. Also, "came up to mind" is an incorrect use of the idiom.
– Cascabel
2 days ago