Had had had sentence?

Had had had sentence?

6. James, while John had had “had,” had had “had had”; “had had” had had a better effect on the teacher. A story accompanies this example. James, however, wrote: “The man had had a cold.” Since James’ answer was right, it had had a better effect on the teacher.

How do you use had?

The past perfect is used when two events happened in the past, with one past action having occurred even before the other past action. To form the past perfect, use had and the past participle of a verb in one part of the sentence. Often, the regular past tense is used in the other part of the sentence.

Has or have exercise?

Have/Has Exercise

  • We ________ a new English teacher.
  • My boss ________ such a bad temper.
  • I never ________ breakfast in the morning because I’m never hungry.
  • The houses all ________ blue windows.
  • An elephant ________ four legs and a big trunk.
  • Many poor people ________ no money to spend.
  • The child ________ red hair and very white skin.

Why I is used with have?

Please remember that we use “has” with third person singular subject only, and since “I” is a first person singular subject we can’t use “has” with ‘I’. Instead we use “have”with first person and second person singular as well as plural subjects . “I have,you have and he has”,same rule applies in the case of”does”.

Has and have sentence examples?

Have or Has

  • “He has a pet dog.” “She has a boyfriend.” “It has rained all day” (present perfect)
  • ‘You’ and ‘I’ use have. “You have a nice apartment.” “I have a problem.”
  • Plural nouns use have. “Dogs have better personalities than cats.”
  • Singular nouns and uncountable nouns use has. “The traffic has made me late.”

Do not have to examples?

Example Sentences;

  • You don’t have to come to school on sundays.
  • We don’t have to watch this movie.
  • She doesn’t have to learn your language.
  • They don’t have to waer a suit.
  • He doesn’t have to take the exam.
  • You didn’t have to work for a salary.
  • We don’t have to buy an egg.

Was or were with there?

We use there is for a singular object in the present tense and there are for plural objects in the present. There was is used when you refer to one thing or person. There were is used when you refer to more than one thing or person.

Was or were after there?

KEY ELEMENT OF LESSON: There was – requires a SINGULAR NOUN. There were – requires a PLURAL NOUN.

Is I wish I were there grammatically correct?

They are both grammatically correct, though the sense of each is different. “I wish I was there” means that the speaker wishes (using the present tense: “wish”) that he or she had been (past tense: “was”) at a specific place at a past time.

Would that there were?

It simply means “I wish” or “O that”. Even today some people will still say “Would that it were so!” in an intentionally archaic manner.

Would that it were Would that it were?

“Would that it were” suggests regret or a wish for an alternative to what is true. The expression would that it were implies a wishful or idealized alternative to an undesired reality.

Would that I had meaning?

“Would that I had” simply means “I would have [done a thing] if only I had [seen or done something]