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    • 1. show的動詞過去式、過去分詞

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  2. The phrasal verb "show up" means 'to arrive' : He showed up, apologising for being late'. But the phrasal verb "show out" means 'to present oneself especially in a public and performative manner' : 'The actress always showed out with a charming and extravagant outfits.'. "Shew" is indeed archaic.

  3. 2009年7月7日 · Jul 10, 2014. #8. The only time 'showed' really works is when used in placed of 'performed' but can also work in place of 'aired'. There may be other scenario's but they are few and 'shown' almost always works better. As long as the sentence is structured right, shown can always be used in it's place and it makes things much simpler.

  4. 2013年5月22日 · He has already showed us the movie about crabs. It has showed to be very important. It is showed that .... Cuando se usa en voz pasiva o como adjetivo, o para expresar que algo se ha demostrado, el participio pasado de show debe de ser shown. Cuando se usa para expresar una acción en voz activa, puede ser shown o showed. Last edited: May 22, 2013.

  5. 2020年8月18日 · There are two past participles for "to show"; they are "shown" the usual one, and "showed"; however "showed" is rarely used (OALD. This ngram shows how rare is "showed". It is so rare that some sources do not list that form (the irreguar verbs). So I should use: Past research has shown? @SayedAli That's what I would do; however I wouldn't ...

  6. 2020年6月15日 · Obviously the word "thus" normally indicates that the showing/exposition was in some preceding text, but even that needn't be the case. Section 1 of a paper could start by saying, for example, First, we [will] prove that A = B, then prove that B = C. Thus it is shown that A = C, the implications of which will be considered in detail in Section 2.

  7. 2018年3月11日 · If something has been discovered in 1980 and I want to refer to this discovery in a scientific text, how would I do this? It has been shown, ... or It was shown, ... and especially: Why is ...

  8. 2018年2月21日 · As a native Irish-English speaker I'd say "We have shown". I'm not 100% of the legalities of why that is, but "We have showed" is just as hard to pronounce as "a apple". If you're reading the paper back, it's much easier to read "have shown" than "have showed".

  9. 2009年10月16日 · Oct 16, 2009. #5. JulianStuart said: The first choice (showed) is one that would be used in an obituary, while the second one (has shown) leaves no doubt that he is still alive. In an obituary I would have said "From his teenage years Mark showed interest in ...". I wouldn't use "Ever since" if the period I was talking about ended in the past.

  10. 2016年12月9日 · One use is to make a passive verb: I show the book. The book is shown. ...as I show in the figure. ...as is shown in the figure. Another use acts like an adjective: as shown in the figure. A clearer example of the adjective use is the past participle "beaten": verb: He was beaten.

  11. 2012年10月1日 · Oct 1, 2012. #6. 'Is showed' may not be 'wrong' in American English, but it is a usage most teachers, for instance, would ask you to change to 'is shown'. It would probably be safer to stick to "This influence of [on?] the production is shown in the graph." Note: I am uncertain that of is the preposition you want.

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