If you can't use the methods above, try this simple approach: "Hello, John. Yes, but there is no direct/reported speech in your sentence. When I read your sentence I immediately wondered what you meant by I don't know why you should use the past perfect in this sentence or what "backshifting" has to do with it. Dear All, I am a BizSpark partner with Microsoft. I am forwarding the message I sent last week to be sure you received it. Many thanks. I don't know why you should use the past perfect in this sentence or what "backshifting" has to do with it. Im afraid to log into it but I was logged in last night just in case you had an opportunity to look for it and read it last night. espacejeunesse.ca. And as I also said, we would consider "had submitted" incorrect. 1) I was wondering if you had a chance to go over the report I had submitted. Ive noticed that if I am not logged into gmail that review is not posted.

2) I was wondering if you have had a chance to go over the report I had submitted. As I said in post 14, it is not necessary to use the past perfect when the timeline is already clear. I’ve also had many chances to eat bananas and grind up cherries with a sharpie, but nobody’s asked me to do that either. Just wondering if you have included office 2010 in the picture? I know that even though "I was wondering" is set in the past tense, I use it in the present to soften my question or request.

We don't backshift with the formula "I was wondering". I didn't mean anything by it, I was just following the rules of backshifting.I guess there's some confusion arising here from the formal past tense appearance of "I was wondering". The "had had" is fine but we would say simply "submitted". ... Just wondering if you have a chance to look into my issue? You can say something like "I dropped off my resume the other day and was wondering if you had a chance to look it over. In the ’70s, 12 states and the District of Columbia passed the sort of laws Pauling had been talking about. I'd be happy to provide more info if needed. 3) I was wondering if you had had a chance to go over the report I had submitted. But the question of whether you have now had a chance to go over it may not be the same as the question of whether you had already had that chance when I was wondering about it. When we are relating a narrative of a past event, it is only necessary to use the past perfect if the timeline needs to be clarified. It would only apply when both the going over and the submission occurred prior to some other past event we had just mentioned. If so, I hope I got most of it right?? Did you have a chance to look into this? For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding. Madeleine 5.

Any ideas? I never had any issues until office 2010. The version I would use is 3), but I would contract the "you had": "I was wondering if you'd had the chance to go over the report I submitted." “We say this chance, 25 percent chance of giving birth to a defective child, is too large to allow a combination of ignorance and free enterprise in love to take care of the matter,” Pauling said. The other machines that connect to it see the file as garbage. So, you're saying that I don't always need to match the tenses if I use it like that?We don't always backshift with the formula "I was wondering", and particularly if our question concerns past events we wouldn't backshift.

Self-made. Many thanks..! If a native speaker thinks it odd, you can decide whether it's As e2efour says, it depends on your definition of "terribly wrong". As you can see, I have been working in [field] for over 10 years. This is quite an important phenomenon in the Montreal area, ades coûts de prestation de retraite et de soins de santé accordés au Canada.Why would the minister sign this deal negotiated by the LiberalsPourquoi le ministre a-t-il signé cet accord négocié par les libéraux avant que leYou mentioned that in your topics, and you also mentioned that they don't represent ... Just wondering if you had a chance to look into my query? As a countable noun, you must use either a or the before the noun (a chance, the chance), e.g.