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Japanese Sentences with English Translations - Sentences [在]

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I've ended up in my present state from having indulged myself.
The grammatical form employed here is the present progressive.
I'm afraid of discord arising with my husband so I'm turning a blind eye to his mistress.
Shiroonitake is a poisonous mushroom but it has real presence, and I like it.
We are currently working to restore normal service as soon as possible.
There is no relation between characters appearing, organisations and places to those that really exist.
I think it is certain that there is intelligent life in this universe, but the likelihood of that life coming to Earth is practically nil.
Those ladies and gentlemen who live in the suburbs of Yokohama, if it is convenient to you, please come.
I don't live in Maigo now.
In the official question collection it is explained as being "passive voice of the present continuous tense".
The grammar section includes the passive voice of the present perfect.
Causing competitors to fail, obtaining confidential information, something that big business just can't do without - high risk but at the same time high return work.
It is even becoming accepted even in exam-English that that called "simple future tense" does not exist.
There are many uses of the 'present tense' of Japanese grammar which indicate things yet to happen.
In a progressive tense sentence it becomes the -ing form verb, that is the present participle.
The present password is "eosdigital".
This sentence is in the present perfect. 'have' is not a verb, but an auxiliary verb.
Adverbial time clauses (here 'when') write about the future in the present tense.
The present perfect expresses the long span from past to present.
We use "present tense" for this kind of case.

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