Till means the same thing as until.
Till is not an abbreviation of until—it's actually older than until—and it should not be written with an apostrophe.
Only the finite verbs (verbs that show or decide the tense of the whole sentence) undergo voice change. Here ‘will have completed’ is the finite verb.
(Incidentally, the verb ‘get’ in the subordinate clause ‘by the time we get there’ is intransitive in nature. It has no object in this context.)
The preposition since is used to show point of time e.g. Since 2015, Since May etc.
The preposition for is used to show period of time e.g. For 3 days, For one hour etc.
He is very careful. He does not allow his children to drive his car in rush hour traffic.
وہ بہت محتاط ہے۔ وہ اپنے بچوں کو رش کے اوقات میں گاڑی چلانے کی اجازت نہیں دیتا۔
The sentence is in the present tense — indicated by: "He is very careful..."
So, the next part must also be in the present tense.
"Will discuss" is the correct future tense form.
It properly indicates a planned action happening tomorrow.
A direct object is a word or phrase that receives the action of the verb.
The students eat cake,
the direct object is cake; the word eat is the verb and cake is what's being eaten.
The correct phrase is "She walked in without knocking".
"Without" indicates the absence of the action of knocking.
Did you hear the President's speech?
We use "Did" to form questions in the simple past tense.
"Hear" is the base form of the verb (after "did," we don't change the verb).
Here 'last morning' shows something happened in the past.
Was is used with a singular subject (Abullah) in the past tense.
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