Has come or has came Which is correct?

“She came” is correct. The word “a” is in the past tense and the word “came” is also in the past tense, you cannot combine them together. If you want to use the word came instead of come, it should be spelled as she came.

Came or came?

“She came” is correct. The word “a” is in the past tense and the word “came” is also in the past tense, you cannot combine them together. If you want to use the word came instead of come, it should be spelled as she came.

WHEN TO USE came and came?

The past participle of the verb kam came, so you should say “I came to a place where…”. came is the past tense (or past tense), so you would say “I came to a place where…”. I have come to a place where […] is right, for I have come is the present perfect time.

Came back or came back?

Since she completed the Return action, you must use the past tense: She returned three weeks ago. If the action is a continuous one (e.g. She came to this place several times), “came” would be correct.

What is the difference between coming and coming?

Came is the past easy. As such, “I’m coming” becomes “I came” when you’re talking about coming into the past. But you can also say I came, which is confusingly known as the present-past. You would use it to talk about a present state that arose as a result of a past action.

Had come in one sentence?

Had come is in the past tense while had came is in the past participle. You had come when you are already writing in the past and want to say something that happened before. Example: I was at school when I knew we would have a teacher from America.

How do you use came in a sentence?

[M][T] Finally I had a great idea. [M][T] The long war is finally over. [M][T] He came to see you right after you left. [M][T] I fell asleep before my father got home.