1 : to be present at : to go to attend a meeting attend law school. 2 : to pay attention to attend the warning signs. 3 : to look after : to take charge of … campsites … attended by park rangers.—
(attend to something/someone) to deal with something or someone. We still have a number of other matters to attend to. He likes work that requires him to attend to a lot of detail.
What is another word for attended?
| shown | arrived |
|---|
| approached | transpired |
| ensued | come out |
| come along | come up |
| visited | presented itself |
a. To be present at: attended the lecture. b. To go regularly to: attended class every Tuesday and Thursday. 2.
attending to would be better, at least in American English. Tend to is usually used to mean to usually do a particular thing or have a particular quality, as in "the nurse, while attending to her patient, tends to be careless and forgetful."
Date attended to: the time or date that you last attended something. E.g. If you started school in 2013 and graduated in 2018-- Date attended from: 2013.
: to or toward the inside of (something) : in the direction of (something) —used to describe hitting or touching something or someone. See the full definition for into in the English Language Learners Dictionary. into.
- Thank you, I will be attending the meeting of the committee on Monday afternoon.
- At present, I am intending to come to the meeting next month.
- I'll be there with bells on.
- I will drop in for the morning presentation, but I will need to Skype from my office for the afternoon session, if you can arrange it.
If it is a business occasion, it will be along the lines of "Thank you for inviting me to attend the conference [title], at [location] on [date]. I have much pleasure in accepting and shall look forward to meeting you then". It is wise to specify all these details as double confirmation of the event, location and date.
Future Tense of attend in english
| Subject | Form |
|---|
| Singular | I | will attend |
| He | will attend |
| She | will attend |
| You | will attend |
Senior MemberIf you're just not going to attend, you'd say, "I will not attend the workshop" or "I will not be attending the workshop."
Re: did not attend / have not attended / had not attendedOnly #1 is correct.
The past perfect refers to a time earlier than before now. It is used to make it clear that one event happened before another in the past. It does not matter which event is mentioned first - the tense makes it clear which one happened first.
verb (used with object)to be present at: to attend a lecture; to attend church.
(Entry 1 of 7) : following in time or place : afterward, behind, later we arrived shortly after returned 20 years after. after. preposition.
preposition. to the inside of; in toward: He walked into the room.
= Here, we know fast is an adjective because it modifies, or describes runner, which is a noun. He runs fast. = Here, we know fast is an adverb because it answers a question about the verb run.
'Did' goes with a verb in the present tense, whereas 'able' is an adjective. “Were you able to download it?” is the right form.
1. Success attended her efforts . 2. Around 350 delegates attended the conference.