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- When do we use “had had” and “have had”? [duplicate]
{ had {had unsatisfactory sex} by the time of his birthday on 20th Dec } Using your original sentences as example Temporal displacement to present: I had my car for four years before I ever learned to drive it today Temporal displacement to last year: I had had my car for four years before I had ever learned to drive it last year
- present perfect - When is it necessary to use have had? - English . . .
We could say we had our copy replaced five years ago, and today it looks worn out We could say we just have had our copy replaced, and the book is as good as new To use grammar labels, "I have had the book replaced" is the Causative in the Perfect Aspect, in the Present; "I had the book replaced" is the Causative in the Simple Aspect, in the
- What does had had mean? How does this differ from had?
By the time we arrived, the party had begun = The party began Then we arrived By the time we arrived, they had eaten all the food! = They ate all the food; then we arrived I had had a bad day already, and I arrived home to find that it had been robbed! = I was having a bad day During the day my home was robbed
- 如何正确理解 had done、have done、have been doing 这 3 种时态? - 知乎
过去完成进行时:By the time my girlfriend showed up, I had been working non-stop on this stupid paper for 24 hours! 到女友进门那一刻,我 !@#$%^ * 已经跟这该死的 paper 连续搏斗了整整24小时了! 现在完成进行时: Yes, I am flying high today, but I have been working like a dog for 25 years! 你只看我
- grammar - Use of have had , had had, has had - English Language . . .
'He has had his breakfast' - present perfect tense with a third person singular subject as in 'He has eaten his breakfast 'I had had my breakfast ' - past perfect tense as in 'I had eaten my breakfast ' Here, the fist part of the verb phrases have has and had are auxiliary and the second part had is the past participle form of the main verb have
- tenses - has changed or had changed or was changed? - English . . .
Let's see if this entry had changed This is the past perfect tense, and refers to the status of the entry being different when measured at some prior unspecified point i e Last time I looked, it was "24" even though before that it was "26" Let's see if this entry was changed There are two possibilities with this wording:
- Struck vs Stricken - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
1891 E Peacock N Brendon II 199 ― The Duke had been stricken by paralysis 1891 Speaker 11 July 36 2 ― The fear is··that public life may be stricken with sterility in consequence of this veto As you see by those citations, both stricken by and stricken with wind up getting used:
- How do you handle that that? The double that problem
Had had had the same issue – moioci Commented Sep 26, 2010 at 5:10 11
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