I dont receive I didnt receive - WordReference Forums Are you sure that you sent me the letter? I don't receive it I didn't receive it May I know are both of the replies in different tenses correct? Past or present tense?
you will receive you will be received - WordReference Forums In context of registration steps: -After you have registered, you will receive an on-screen confirmation and a link to where you can login I wonder here why it's not "you will be received"? it's looks like a passive voice to me
you will have received will receive [future perfect vs simple future] You should receive the samples latest by tomorrow morning Let's meet on Wednesday, 9am sharp to discuss the results I'm sure you will have received the samples and completed the analysis by then " This expresses that the receiving and analyzing will be a past event on Wednesday -- or better, it will have to be a past event, because I demand
We Did Receive - WordReference Forums We did receive a container-load of 10,000 green orangutans, but as I am sure you appreciate there is no market for green orangutans Please arrange to collect the orangutans and deliver the teddy bears and pandas ordered as soon as possible
You will be receiving vs You will receive - WordReference Forums Nodes that actively filter spam will progressively climb the ladder and thus will (receive be receiving) less spam messages " So, from your questions I understand there are contexts in which the two forms have different meanings, isn't it? Could you please give me an example?
Have you received it? vs Did you receive it? Hey guys, If I fax a document to my friend, should I ask him 1) Have you received it? or, 2) Did you receive it? Thanks in advance Please help!
Im yet to receive I havent received - WordReference Forums The first sentence looks strange, LSIO You probably meant to write I have yet to receive your email This sentence does mean exactly the same thing that the second sentence means
when you receive will have received | WordReference Forums Number one is good, number two is clumsy (say "when you have received the package), number three is correct but obviously differs from the other two because of that "that" which indicates that the speaker believes that the packages have most likely been received
receive BACK? - WordReference Forums No, you can't say "receive back" in either situation You would say, "I've not received it", and with an indirect object, you would say, "I've not received it from the office" By using "back", are you trying to express that you're receiving it for the second time? I'm not sure how you'd get this across another way, without explaining it in quite a long-winded way