Comments from conjugation.com and Facebook
Photo | Name City Country |
Verb | Message | Date Submited |
---|---|---|---|---|
cindy |
its nice to have this kind of website especially for me,,im one of the seeker of this website,,great! coz i found it
....hope you can send me some tips in english... |
2010/04/23 | ||
eduardo Henao Hoyos |
Dear gentlemen:
I hope this letter, al least draw a smild in your face.
For my work I have to tern to read english and I can say that I have a vocabulary very acceptable; but I don´t know grammar and I don´t know the conjugation of the vervbs.
¿ would you be so kind and advice me, so I be able of learn to write and understand english?
If I hear a t. v. news I don´t understand a word, but if I read a paper book,how could be Perry Mason, Agatha Cristhie I understand a lot. How I am a very silly and dumb man because I sure than I can read english Would you be so kind and advise me a page in internet with ladder books so I can read and hear english, first, 1000 words, after 2000 words and so on.
I am a retired colombian lawyer. I live in Manizales a wonderful city, very quiet, very clean an very much other things. Thank for your time. I write this "letter" without the help of a dictionary
Truly yours
Eduardo Henao Hoyos |
2010/04/26 | ||
Kaly |
Hello,
Kaly from MakeUseOf.com is here.
As it was mentioned in our previous email we decided to feature your website in our "Cool Websites and Tools" daily post series. It is now has been published on the homepage and will be also delivered to over 200.000 newslater subscribers. Please check out our review and feel free to comment in case we missed something.
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/cool-websites-tools-april-27th/
We would appreciate if you give it a boost by 'Stumbling', 'Re-Tweeting' or share the post with your Facebook friends using the buttons at the bottom of the article.
Best regards,
Kaly (the editor and co-founder)
MakeUseOf.com |
2010/04/28 | ||
Brian Bridges |
Conjugation.com is a great site that needs to be shared with K-12 educators. The California Learning Resource Network (CLRN) is a state-funded project that reviews commercial electronic learning resources, free web sites, and digital textbooks for K-12 education. We would love to include a review of your site among our 3300 web reviews. Unfortunately, the small ads posted on your pages prohibit us from sharing your site with our customers. Is there any way you can make an ad-free version available?
thanks,
Brian Bridges
Director, CLRN |
2010/04/28 | ||
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 | ||
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 | ||
Phaedra Mohammed |
Hello,
I am interested in using your conjugation engine in part of my research. Who should I contact? Thanks! |
2010/05/26 | ||
Noel P Heather |
My apologies, I have the feeling that this is a stupid question, however, here it is. In conjugating "come with" (see below) and many others, you show three entries under the affirmative. "do not come with" is entered twice, please explain. Many thanks, Noel
do not come with
let's not come with
do not come with
(Great site) |
2010/05/31 | ||
Matt Nutsch |
Good afternoon,
Would it be possible to obtain your list of conjugated verbs in a database or spreadsheet format? I'm working on an language processing program as a hobby and I need to find a table of conjugated verbs.
Sincerely,
Matt Nutsch |
2010/06/02 | ||
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 |