| 41. | Note that, in the last two examples ( perfective and pluperfect ), two roots are used in one verb compound.
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| 42. | Other forms, such as the pluperfect, the future II, the progressive forms or the conjunctive forms are somewhat complicated.
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| 43. | The Latin pluperfect was preserved in very early Old French as a past tense with a value similar to a preterite or imperfect.
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| 44. | Ancient Greek also had a mediopassive in the present, imperfect, perfect, and pluperfect Albanian have only mediopassive in all tenses.
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| 45. | New " perfect " and " pluperfect " tenses had also been formed, probably by influence of the Indo-European languages.
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| 46. | The pluperfect is used instead of the preterite when some other past fact ( often in a prior sentence ) is being referenced.
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| 47. | During breaks in the action a four-piece band called Pluperfect and the Past Participles plays popular music from days long gone by.
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| 48. | This formation is very similar to Indo-European language ), where the perfect and the pluperfect are expressed in the following way:
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| 49. | For decades, the pluperfect illustration of " bald-faced lie " has been : tobacco executives claiming cigarettes do no harm.
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| 50. | The far past tense is used for events that happened more than 18 hours ago, and can also be used as a weak pluperfect.
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