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  1. Drew or Drawn: Which Is Correct? (Helpful Examples…

    “Drew” is the simple past tense of “draw.” We don’t need any additions to this tense when trying to write it in a sentence. “Drawn” is the past participle of “draw.” Alone, it has no meaning, but combined with an auxiliary verb; it creates one of three perfect tenses. 1. I drew a picture of you! 2. You have drawn with excellence and skill! And make...

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    “Drew” is correct when thinking back to an event where “drawing” took place in the past. We can do this only when thinking back and without having any further impact or effect on the outcome in the present. You might also be interested to know that the past tense verb form “drew” never changes. It always stays the same, regardless of the pronoun we...

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    Let’s go through some simple past tense examples now: 1. I drew a picture of you, and I hope you like it! 2. You drew me again, and I must say it’s your best piece! 3. He drew something about you and me, but I didn’t get to look at it for long. 4. I drew on the power from the almighty one to get here. 5. You drew the wrong playing card, you idiot! ...

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    We need to know how the past participle works more than the simple past tense. After all, it’s the form that comes with the most dependable language rules. “Drawn” is only correct when a helping verb like “have” comes with it. “Have drawn” is the present perfect tense, which is one of three potential options we have. On its own, you can never use “...

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    Rather than letting you get confused about which perfect tense is which, we’ll split the next bit into three different sections to help out!

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