Tea is come or tea has come lunch is ready or lunch has ready he is come back or he has come back she is assigned for work or. Shouldn't the title be “have trump's political views…”, what with ‘views’ being plural It is ungrammatical to use 'has' in questions that begin with 'do' or 'does'
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In these types of questions the verb 'do' is conjugated based on whether the noun is first, second or third person (eg do i, do you or , does he)
The 'have' part of the question is not conjugated and appears as the bare infinitive regardless of the person of the noun.
Can anyone tell me where we have to use has and where we have to use have Can anyone explain me in a simple way? Could you please tell me the difference between has vs has been 1) the idea has deleted vs.
2) the idea has been deleted what is the difference between these two? The question asked covers more ground than just have or has I think op's example is just one example and the question asked is in order to know if who agrees with the verb when who is subject of this verb. It has got four legs the verb is has got, and has is an auxiliary
This is how we tend to use contractions when speaking fairly carefully
When speaking quickly, has as a main verb tends to be reduced to /əz/ (especially in british accents) this might be written as 's. So yes, in these cases do becomes does for third person singular because it is finite. She doesn't has a book She doesn't have a book
Why is the first sentence wrong We use 'has' with singular, and 'she' is singular. The subject of have is videos and pictures, which is a compound of two plural nouns The correct verb form is have
It has, and they have.
Has trump's political views changed on israel's war in gaza Another user felt it wasn't grammatically correct