He is appointed as manager And he has been appointed as manager Similarly, what is the difference between these two sentences? 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. 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. 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?
In this case as the first one we have an exception anytime we have each, every, and either or neither we use the verb in singular in this case has rather than have which would have more sense at first but it's grammatically incorrect. 1) australia has won the world cup cricket 2) australia have won the world cup cricket Also, i would like to know more contexts where 'country has' and 'country ha. Has is third person singular So, if you have a subject at the third person singular (hint
You can replace the subject with he, she or it), you say has been Otherwise, you say have been In your example, this report problem is the subject No, so it is singular Does it refer to you or i No, so it is third person singular
I am a developer and want to add message to my application once the record has been added to the database So i am confused about the right way to write/speak. 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. There has been some rapid progress This is correct, because progress is an uncountable noun (ie
Nouns that we can't count, so don't have different plural forms) Therefore, it can only take a singular verb.
OPEN