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The coronavirus pandemic has ripple effects on the whole community Does anyone has/have a black pen Another sense is to speak of general facts
For this you could use a plural, so you could say Here, i wish to ask a question of the form Bank crashes have a ripple effect.these uses are rather less likely than past event with present effects so usually this would be in the form quoted in the dictionary.
According to my understanding, 'has' is what i should use because 'ferrari' is a name of a team
But, i've been listening to a lot of youtubers using 'have' One of such examples is charles leclerc escapes penalty and more | jolyon palmer on the 2019 italian grand prix At 16:04, he says ferrari, since the summer break, have hit hard. Note that the simple present of to have, third person singular, is has. he has done his homework
The done remains in the base form, and does not change Had is simple past, and does not change for person or number He had done his homework, so he was allowed to go to the movies. Only the first one is correct because the basic form of perfect tense is have/has/had + past participle
Come is a confusing word in english because its plain form and its past participle form are the same.
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.
A number of public scandals has recently led to new federal legislation, which is creating higher demand for forensic accountants I had thought that since the subject is a number (of), has is appropriate. 'was created' implies that it was created some time in the past but exactly when is unimportant 'has been created' implies the event occurred very recently.
English unfortunately does not have gender independent pronouns
One must know that and all the people who think using he/she in a sentence meant for a general person does not mean it is sexist The language does not give the liberty to decide gender in pronouns The answer to the question would be 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. I have read a similar question here but that one talks about the usage of has/have with reference to anyone
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