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"This is not what I signed up for!"
1 "this is not what I signed up for" is what you might say if you started doing the task and then found that you did not like it. While the action is only hypothetical or an instruction, you would probably says " that is not what I signed up for", and "that is" would usually be contracted to "that's".

WordReference Forums
Active forums about languages and translation

When should I use "didn't" instead of "haven't"?
Haven't refers to the past up until now. So if you haven't done something, you haven't done it for a specific period of time (day, month, ever, etc.) Didn't refers to a specific point of time that has already passed. For example, if it is 7 PM, you could say "I didn't eat dinner at 6" or "I haven't eaten dinner yet today".

present perfect - Haven't or didn't? - English Language Learners Stack ...
Present Perfect and Past Simple are two concurent tenses. They often are interchangeable, especially in American English. So you can say either: I haven't received your email. or I didn't receive your email. Note that "I didn't received your email" is not correct because you cannot use -ed form of the main verb since you already have the verb "didn't".

"I login" vs "I am logged in" vs "I had been logged in"
I would say to use this: I see below at website after I login successfully. I login: Login is a present tense verb, so "I login" is saying "I login (right now)". I am logged in: Saying that you have logged in already and you are stating that. I had been logged in: Past tense. Saying that you were logged in, but the sentence is presuming you are no longer logged in.

Should I use "did you" or "didn't you" in the following?
The use of did you would imply that the questioner was seeking an answer that might be either positive or negative. The use of didn't you implies that the questioner is merely looking for confirmation that you did - or, in some situations - especially those involving court cases or interrogation - putting pressure on you to admit that you did.

grammar - Didn't see or wasn't/weren't seeing? , simple sistuation but ...
Didn't see is fine in all three sentences (or couldn't see if you were actively looking for something).

I've tried but it didn't work vs I've tried but it hasn't worked
(1) I tried but it didn't work. (2) I've tried but it didn't work. (3) I've tried but it hasn't worked. Sentence (1) (not in the question) suggests that a single trial was made. Sentence (2) could indicate either a single trial or multiple trials. Sentence (3) suggests repeated trials, but might be used for a single trial. In each case the trial is at some (unspecified) time in the past, and ...

grammar - Are these sentences correct? (past perfect) - English ...
In the context there is no real difference in meaning between the first and second example. There may be slight difference in emphasis, but either could be used and would be correct. The last example is not very well written, it looks a little childish. When snow is falling we say "It is snowing". The perfect form would be "It has been snowing" (used when discussing a past action with effects ...

difference - Why "I hadn't noticed" instead of "I didn't notice"/"I ...
While the three say the same thing about the past, they say very different things about the present. “I hadn’t noticed” means I didn’t notice that before, but I do now. “I haven’t noticed” means I didn’t notice that before, and I still don’t. “I didn’t notice” only refers to the past; it says nothing about the present.

 

 

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