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The meaning of this sentence is that she was dead at that time, and death is an instantaneous thing, and you can't use the present perfect tense, and if you do, it becomes "She has been dead until now??? Hehe, emphasizing the result of her death at that time.
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The tense of a sentence used in conjunction with by the time depends mainly on whether the point in time occurred in the past or in the present or future.
By the time has two meanings:
One: by the time can be translated as: at this time, at this time. Equivalent to at the time
by the time he had lost contact with the party.
By this time, he had lost contact with the party.
by the time we had settled in the third bus.
By this time we were already seated in the third car.
二: by the time, which means: in. Already before.
by the time our teacher came in ,we had started speaking english.
Before the teacher came in, we were all already speaking English.
The structure of your sentence is right. It's just that the translation doesn't feel a bit smooth.
by the time when got to the bus station,the bus had left.
By the time we arrived at the station, the car had already driven away.
by+ time noun. It means: "To....(something has happened), at which point the predicate is mostly used in the perfect tense; At the latest, no later than...., in....before".
Such as: by now then this time next Friday the end of three o clock, etc.
by the end of last year,another new gymnasium had been completed.By the end of last year, a new stadium had been completed.
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Gone can be used as a descriptive word for pie: departed, dead. It can also be used as a past participle of the verb go to indicate that it has departed.
was gone denotes the state of the past and is in the simple past tense.
Example sentence: He was gone in a trice
In the blink of an eye, he was gone.
the old social order was gone forever.
The old social order is gone. the window was open. she was gone.
The window was open, and she was gone.
he was gone half an hour.
When he walked half of the small dust hall.
the bank robber was gone.
The bank robbers ran away.
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Do not have any prepositions before home, remember this, keep it firmly in mind.
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This sentence is wrong, because there can only be one predicate verb in a sentence (except for complex sentences), there are two verbs here am and go, so it is wrong!
Knowledge Analysis: When I am gone. gone is an adjective. Construct the system table structure. You can look up the word gone.
As for why not to use was, here it is expressed in the future tense, when I am gone. It's just that the present tense is used to indicate the future tense! You don't have to dwell on this tense!
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gone is equivalent to an adjective here and is equal to when i am not hereor when i am awayWhen I'm not here, there are some past participles that can be used as adjectives, such as the door is closed
The door is closed, not in the past tense.
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when i am gone
gone is a past participle, formed with the verb be (am) to be dynamic, gone past participle can often be used as an adjective, the meaning is: absent; Departed So, the meaning of the original sentence: When I am gone, when I am not there, I hope to be satisfied, I wish you progress :)
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gone Here is the past participle, this sentence is actually a subjunctive mood, omitting if, and many sentences are composed and translated by context.
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So what's the main sentence that precedes it?? It's a subjunctive mood.
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It can be replaced with when, not while
In fact, this is a fixed usage in English, using by the time to guide a time adverbial clause to indicate that another action has been completed before an action has occurred in the past, which is a usage that must be spoken when speaking the past perfect tense. by the time is in. Previously meant.
When can be replaced, the meaning is basically the same, that is, from"She was gone before he returned"It became "She was gone when he returned." "While generally has a time period and a slight sense of comparison, so it can't be used here.