Sarah is pulling Clem down... I'm gonna post another pic of this tormorrow, where you can see her face, I really think her expression turned out quite good
Sarah is pulling Clem down... I'm gonna post another pic of this tormorrow, where you can see her face, I really think her expression turned out quite good
"Was fallen" is not a correct construction, per se. "Fallen" is a 3rd form of the verb "to fall" and is mostly used in Perfect tenses, unless it's an adjective.
Past simple would just be "She fell on Sarah."
But, I'm not a native speaker, and not much of a grammar expert. If anybody wants to explain it, feel free.
Sarah is pulling Clem down... I'm gonna post another pic of this tormorrow, where you can see her face, I really think her expression turned out quite good
Sarah is pulling Clem down... I'm gonna post another pic of this tormorrow, where you can see her face, I really think her expression turned out quite good
Sarah is pulling Clem down... I'm gonna post another pic of this tormorrow, where you can see her face, I really think her expression turned out quite good
"Was fallen" is not a correct construction, per se. "Fallen" is a 3rd form of the verb "to fall" and is mostly used in Perfect tenses, unles… mores it's an adjective.
Past simple would just be "She fell on Sarah."
But, I'm not a native speaker, and not much of a grammar expert. If anybody wants to explain it, feel free.
I just love how Clem's face turned out, when she's pulled over the couch
I'm gonna post the last picture of this series later today! The last for now, you'll see I actually have 3 angles of that last scene. It turned out so well... it will break you heart a little bit And with different angles I can torture you guys a little longer
I just love how Clem's face turned out, when she's pulled over the couch
I'm gonna post the last picture of this series later today!… more The last for now, you'll see I actually have 3 angles of that last scene. It turned out so well... it will break you heart a little bit And with different angles I can torture you guys a little longer
if you're saying she didn't fall but was moved onto Sarah then you'd probably want to say that she was pulled onto sarah. she cold have been falling onto sarah, she could have fallen onto sarah, she coule even must have been falling onto Sarah, but she couldn't have been fallen. you can see how that doesn't work.
Ok, I've looked a little bit around. My constrution seems to be correct. Maybe passive constructions are not that common in English in past tense?
A sentence in passive form uses the past participle form (here: fallen) and an auxiliary verb to indicate the tense (here: was for simple past)
Example:
Sentence in active form in simple past: "Clem fell onto Sarah"
That same sentence in passive form: "Clem was fallen onto Sarah". It implies that Clem didn't fall by herself, but that another actor forced her to fall. In passive form the sentences' subject does not control the action. Note that Sarah is not the actual object that performs the action. With that object the sentence would be "Clem was fallen onto Sarah by Sarah", but that sounds silly
if you're saying she didn't fall but was moved onto Sarah then you'd probably want to say that she was pulled onto sarah. she cold have been… more falling onto sarah, she could have fallen onto sarah, she coule even must have been falling onto Sarah, but she couldn't have been fallen. you can see how that doesn't work.
I was once tripped by my asshole friend at school while we were all jumping rope. We were jumping rope on horrendously rough, hard, jagged blacktop. I fell right on my ass, and even though it was years ago, I can still remember the dreadful pain I felt for at least weeks following. There is no way my tailbone made it out of that unscathed. I hurt to move, and it hurt to sit, no matter how soft the surface. For all the time I was injured I hobbled around like a crippled senior citizen. I was in constant pain, and sometimes if I made the wrong movement, it would hurt so bad it would force me to gasp because the air would just get knocked right out of me. Luckily, Clem is not gonna be feeling that kind of pain here. It looks like she was barely tossed over onto the wooden floor, but Sarah was still holding on to her so she probably let her down fairly easily. The look on Clem's face is some pain and some disappointment in her little plan failing.
Ok, I've looked a little bit around. My constrution seems to be correct. Maybe passive constructions are not that common in English in past … moretense?
A sentence in passive form uses the past participle form (here: fallen) and an auxiliary verb to indicate the tense (here: was for simple past)
Example:
Sentence in active form in simple past: "Clem fell onto Sarah"
That same sentence in passive form: "Clem was fallen onto Sarah". It implies that Clem didn't fall by herself, but that another actor forced her to fall. In passive form the sentences' subject does not control the action. Note that Sarah is not the actual object that performs the action. With that object the sentence would be "Clem was fallen onto Sarah by Sarah", but that sounds silly
Yea, she didn't break any bones here It's just a moments pain I also intented her facial expression to be close to tears in addition to pain and disappointment.
I made it intentionally ambiguous, tomorrow you'll see why.
I was once tripped by my asshole friend at school while we were all jumping rope. We were jumping rope on horrendously rough, hard, jagged b… morelacktop. I fell right on my ass, and even though it was years ago, I can still remember the dreadful pain I felt for at least weeks following. There is no way my tailbone made it out of that unscathed. I hurt to move, and it hurt to sit, no matter how soft the surface. For all the time I was injured I hobbled around like a crippled senior citizen. I was in constant pain, and sometimes if I made the wrong movement, it would hurt so bad it would force me to gasp because the air would just get knocked right out of me. Luckily, Clem is not gonna be feeling that kind of pain here. It looks like she was barely tossed over onto the wooden floor, but Sarah was still holding on to her so she probably let her down fairly easily. The look on Clem's face is some pain and some disappointment in her little plan failing.
I was once tripped by my asshole friend at school while we were all jumping rope. We were jumping rope on horrendously rough, hard, jagged b… morelacktop. I fell right on my ass, and even though it was years ago, I can still remember the dreadful pain I felt for at least weeks following. There is no way my tailbone made it out of that unscathed. I hurt to move, and it hurt to sit, no matter how soft the surface. For all the time I was injured I hobbled around like a crippled senior citizen. I was in constant pain, and sometimes if I made the wrong movement, it would hurt so bad it would force me to gasp because the air would just get knocked right out of me. Luckily, Clem is not gonna be feeling that kind of pain here. It looks like she was barely tossed over onto the wooden floor, but Sarah was still holding on to her so she probably let her down fairly easily. The look on Clem's face is some pain and some disappointment in her little plan failing.
Comments
But she's still scared for her life!
Sarah is pulling Clem down... I'm gonna post another pic of this tormorrow, where you can see her face, I really think her expression turned out quite good
She did fall on Sarah! (Kind of) I knew that would happen
It's more like she was fallen onto Sarah. (Is that right, simple past passive?)
"Was fallen" is not a correct construction, per se. "Fallen" is a 3rd form of the verb "to fall" and is mostly used in Perfect tenses, unless it's an adjective.
Past simple would just be "She fell on Sarah."
But, I'm not a native speaker, and not much of a grammar expert. If anybody wants to explain it, feel free.
Is Sarah throwing Clem to the ground?
Sarah's pulling Clem in for a hug.
I thought it looked like Ben at first
WARNING: CUTENESS OVERLOAD
Sarah was like...
I want to see some pictures with tessellation. the volume created on the clothes and scenery should greatly enrich the graph of the game!
I think TT should use it for real.
Got ya!!
average is 5'4
Ironically, these are both lonely island songs.
I'M AN ADDDULLTTTTTT!!!!
Yes, that I know. I was wondering about the passive construction of simple perfect.
She is!
Clem: This is gonna suck
Sarah is not part of this system.
I just love how Clem's face turned out, when she's pulled over the couch
I'm gonna post the last picture of this series later today! The last for now, you'll see I actually have 3 angles of that last scene. It turned out so well... it will break you heart a little bit And with different angles I can torture you guys a little longer
adorable as always
She sure is!
Ouch! That didn't end well
That... hurt.
She could've broken her tailbone o_0
Damn......that had to hurt
That definately did hurt... a lot!
Sure, but kids don't think this through
if you're saying she didn't fall but was moved onto Sarah then you'd probably want to say that she was pulled onto sarah. she cold have been falling onto sarah, she could have fallen onto sarah, she coule even must have been falling onto Sarah, but she couldn't have been fallen. you can see how that doesn't work.
Aw, the only thing that's not heart breaking about this picture is that Sarah's holding Clem's hand.
I've fallen on my ass before and I can say it hurts like hell
Ok, I've looked a little bit around. My constrution seems to be correct. Maybe passive constructions are not that common in English in past tense?
A sentence in passive form uses the past participle form (here: fallen) and an auxiliary verb to indicate the tense (here: was for simple past)
Example:
Sentence in active form in simple past: "Clem fell onto Sarah"
That same sentence in passive form: "Clem was fallen onto Sarah". It implies that Clem didn't fall by herself, but that another actor forced her to fall. In passive form the sentences' subject does not control the action. Note that Sarah is not the actual object that performs the action. With that object the sentence would be "Clem was fallen onto Sarah by Sarah", but that sounds silly
She's not holding her hand. She just didn't let go
Haven't we all? But I bet her foot hitting the table did hurt a lot more
I was once tripped by my asshole friend at school while we were all jumping rope. We were jumping rope on horrendously rough, hard, jagged blacktop. I fell right on my ass, and even though it was years ago, I can still remember the dreadful pain I felt for at least weeks following. There is no way my tailbone made it out of that unscathed. I hurt to move, and it hurt to sit, no matter how soft the surface. For all the time I was injured I hobbled around like a crippled senior citizen. I was in constant pain, and sometimes if I made the wrong movement, it would hurt so bad it would force me to gasp because the air would just get knocked right out of me. Luckily, Clem is not gonna be feeling that kind of pain here. It looks like she was barely tossed over onto the wooden floor, but Sarah was still holding on to her so she probably let her down fairly easily. The look on Clem's face is some pain and some disappointment in her little plan failing.
When did this turn into an English class?
Yea, she didn't break any bones here It's just a moments pain I also intented her facial expression to be close to tears in addition to pain and disappointment.
I made it intentionally ambiguous, tomorrow you'll see why.
Especially if she hit her ankle
Well your "friend" sounds like a gigantic dick