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  1. Basing or Based? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Here is a slightly artificial sentence that illustrates the use of a participle phrase with a present participle, with an active meaning: Many companies evaluate students, basing their judgment on their teachers' …

  2. "Basing" versus "based" - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Basing here is the present or active participle; it modifies the Agent of the verb base, the one who performs the action, namely us. Now recast the original proposition into the passive voice, as it is …

  3. tense - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    You are correct. Use "I base my decisions" for describing repeated situations past, present, and (presumably) future. Use "I based my decisions" for decisions made only in the past.

  4. Is there any difference between 'based on' and 'on the basis of'?

    Feb 21, 2016 · A basis is reasons or justifications for making a logical argument. On the basis of is used to reference those reasons. On the basis of the General Theory of Relativity, gravity ripples were …

  5. General aptitude question which got me confused

    Feb 23, 2026 · Question: [Basing one's analysis on the passage] Is the statement True or False? Clarification Requested: When answering, should the word “some” be interpreted strictly as an …

  6. 'had began’ vs. 'had begun' [closed] - English Language Learners ...

    Apr 20, 2018 · In the short story "In the Eye of the Beholder" by Jeffrey Archer there's a sentence that goes: By the time Gian Lorenzo had began his apprenticeship, Paolo had been appointed captain of …

  7. word choice - "headline" vs "heading" vs "header" - English Language ...

    In the question are "header" and "heading" interchangable in the context of "information at the top of something"? an answer explains how header is a part of the page (

  8. meaning - "You are up next" vs "You are next" - English Language ...

    Feb 20, 2018 · American English has a tendency toward a certain overflow of prepositions (sometimes attached to the verb, sometimes without). It's the same phenomenon as in phrases such as, — …

  9. grammar - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Oct 30, 2023 · Make sure your verbs are in the correct tense - you say "outnumbered", so you must be basing this on data that was collected in the past, but you have used both "preferred" and "prefer". …

  10. why is 'go' different in 'if she goes' vs. 'should she go'?

    Sep 30, 2025 · Why is the verb conjugated differently in conditionals using 'if' vs. 'should'? For example, If she goes to the park/Should she go to the park or If he requires/Should he require Does if/should