Comments from conjugation.com and Facebook
Photo | Name City Country |
Verb | Message | Date Submited |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nelba Quintana |
Your website is great. I have recommended it to my students in my blog http://adults5escuelaunlp.blogspot.com/2010/10/moudle-12.html |
2010/10/30 | ||
Lucia Maselli |
molto utile |
2010/11/23 | ||
Vladimir Slovakia, EU |
Best regards from Slovakia.
Thank you very much for such a great and useful site, friends. My english is pretty bad and here I have found many of useful informations.
Keep your great work up! |
2010/12/05 | ||
Thomas Kesler West Lafafayette IN USA |
Recently, I stumbled on your Web site while reading the essay "verb" at wikipedia.org. Great work! I wish that we had the Internet and your conjugation site when I was in school.
I immediately looked up "lie," "lay," and "lie." I found the first two but not the third:
lie, lied, lying - to fib
(according to merriamwebster.com)
Is "lie" present and I just missed it?
The following definition appears on your page about "lie" as in "lie down":
- Tell an untruth; pretend with intent to deceive |
2010/12/24 | ||
katiuh Chisinau Moldova |
You are the best!!! |
2011/01/14 | ||
Ibon Zaldua Elgoibar Basque Country |
Dear people,
It's an amazing and very useful website.
We'd be very grateful if you could insert the Basque language in the translations. The following might help you: online dictionary English-Basque ---> http://www1.euskadi.net/morris/
Thanks a lot. |
2011/01/17 | ||
James Bumgarner Pacific Palisades USA |
Today I was reading a commentary from a very well read fellow who used the word "learnt". In my English learning background that seemed, well, rather unlearned. So I checked into it. I have Microsoft Word, which was no help, because it gave both instances as correct. Next I used Webster's online dictionary. It indicated that "learnt" was the English version of the past tense of "learn". Then I came upon your website, and, unless I missed it, "learned" is not a proper use of the past tense of "learn".
Please address this for those of us who have learned/learnt that one or the other may be more correct. In my experience "learnt" is used infrequently, in comparison to "learned". |
2011/01/18 | ||
Chris Columbus Kuwait/USA |
I like your site.
However, how hard would it be to put a definition of the verb being conjugated?
I needed to do "lie" as in He lied about liking your site. What I got was related to placing an object in an horizontal orientation.
Could not figure out how to find the other lie.
Thank you,
Chris |
2011/01/23 | ||
Multilingual verb conjugation |
I use it often; my kids use it daily! |
2011/01/27 | ||
Dr. Ross Cranston, RI USA |
heave | Although "heaved" is correct as the past tense sing. and past tense pl. of "to heave", "hove" is also acceptable as past tense and past participle. It may be slightly more archaic or more common in nautical usage, but "hove" is a fine word and should not |
2011/02/10 |