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adjectives - When should I use next, upcoming and coming?
2021年4月28日 · "in coming months" "in the next few months" (this may suggest more immediacy than other options, but not necessarily) "in the upcoming months" (this is awkward and uncommon) This means next month: "next month" These are not valid: "in next month" "in next months" "in upcoming months" (this is almost valid, but awkward)
future time - "Will come" or "Will be coming" - English Language ...
2016年6月4日 · I will be coming tomorrow. The act of "coming" here is taking a long time from the speaker/writer's point of view. One example where this would apply is if by "coming" the speaker/writer means the entire process of planning, packing, lining up travel, and actually traveling for a vacation. I will come tomorrow.
Coming vs. Going - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
2020年8月19日 · Indeed, "immigration" and "coming to a new country" are closely aligned. The problem is that your example sentence seems to be spoken by an omniscient narrator who doesn't reside anywhere. The same voice might say. Spain is on the Iberian Peninsula. Where is the speaker? Probably not in Spain. Now, if someone said. He is coming to Spain.
Is coming or comes - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
2021年7月20日 · A movie timetable is a future arrangement, and it would be normal and natural to use present continuous in this situation. This is re-enforced by idiom. Movie trailers often say "Coming soon to a theatre near you!"
word usage - Why "coming up"? Why not simply "coming"?
2019年5月28日 · The phrase "coming up" can also be sued to mean "happening soon, as in . The Fourth of July is coming up. In this sense "coming" could also be used, but "coming up" suggests closer proximity in time, and greater urgency. "Coming up" is also used of a diver or a submarine moving toward the surface of the water.
word choice - I am cumming or I am coming - English Language …
2015年2月7日 · will cum, will come, cummed, came, is cumming, is coming, have cum, have come. Because only a few of the standard recognized resources (dictionaries) describe these words in detail, and because they are generally considered by such as slang, we may not have a great deal of "authoritative" guidance in their spellings and usages.
present tense - Do you come? Are you coming? - English …
Are you coming? is a complete question asking whether someone will join you in your travels. The same applies in your next two sentences. Are you coming with me? (correct) Do you come with me. (incorrect) However, if you change "do" to "will" Will you come? Will you come with me?
"Coming soon" or "coming next" or…? - English Language …
2015年10月15日 · If X is coming soon, something could come before X, even though by saying soon you are saying not much time will pass before X comes. If X is coming next, nothing else should come before X. A long time (an interval not considered soon) could pass before X comes.
tense - Comes, will come, coming, be coming - English Language …
2018年2月3日 · He's coming tomorrow is the most common in speech, I would say, but all the rest are possible in particular contexts. He comes tomorrow is talking about somebody's plan or intention. I can't articulate any other differences.
usage - have someone come or coming? - English Language …
2023年5月13日 · We have journalists coming from all over the world. If you were to swap this for the present tense along with the present participle, the situation changes. It makes the reader think that journalists are at this moment on their way to have a photo taken.