Has and have exercises with answers?

Has and have exercises with answers?

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.

Have been and had been exercises?

Has, Has Been & Had Been

  • Has. – She has a new hat. (= She owns a new hat) – She has eaten lunch already.
  • Has been. – They have been married for 30 years. (= Their marriage lasted for the last 30 years) – We have been waiting since 2 o’clock.
  • Had been. – He had been very tired before he fell asleep. ( First he was tired, and then he fell asleep)

Has have had example?

When have is used as an ordinary verb, it has past and past participle forms. I usually have bread and butter for breakfast, but yesterday I had pasta….Have had and had had

  • I have a sister.
  • She has a car.
  • He has a nice job.
  • I have breakfast at 8.30.
  • I have a shower before I go to bed.
  • I have a nap in the afternoon.

When to use have had or had?

In the present perfect, the auxiliary verb is always have (for I, you, we, they) or has (for he, she, it). In the past perfect, the auxiliary verb is always had. We use have had in the present perfect when the main verb is also “have”: I’m not feeling well.

Was done or had been done?

“Has been done” is a present perfect passive tense, which should be used for an action that happened at an unspecified time in the past. You should not use this tense when the time is specified. Use the simple past passive “was done” instead.

Had done or had been done?

Have done — Have done is a present perfect tense, generally it is used when the action is completed recently/just now. Had done– Had done is a past perfect tense, generally refers to something which happened earlier in the past, before another action also occured in the past.

Had it been done?

This is not a sentence, but just a verb form. ‘had been + past participle’ is the past perfect tense in the passive voice. It’s completely correct. had been done, had been seen, had been shown, had been found, had been known, had been sung, had been taken …

Have been done have been doing?

“Have been doing” means that the action started in the past and is continuing into the present. Example: ‘Have been doing’ means that I was doing that in the past and I am still doing it in the present. ‘Have done’ means I am finished with doing that.

What tense is had been done?

PAST PERFECT TENSE

Has been completed or had been completed?

We use ‘Was completed’ when we talk about an incident which happened a time long ago or referring some incidents without exactly mentioning the time of its occurrence… On other hand, we use ‘had been completed’ to explain something which happened a few times ago or in one term recently…

Is having been correct?

Firstly , “having been” is totally wrong, therefore to form the present perfect you can say , he/she has been a teacher. Secondly, in the past perfect you can say , he/she had been a teacher. Take note that there are slight changes between “has” and “had” whereby “been” remains constantly as a participle of “be”.

Is it I been or I’ve been?

1 Answer. Since you’ve gone I’ve been lost without a trace. “I been” is not Standard English, and you should avoid writing it outside of quoted direct speech.

Was or have been Grammar?

You use “was” (past tense) for the events that occurred at a known time in the past and ended in the past. Hey, Paul I was busy working in the morning. You use “have been” (present perfect tense) for the events that occurred in an undefined time in the past and they or may not still last.

Have you been in or have you been to?

‘I’ve been in’ means that you visited some place and came back to your country. ‘I’ve been to’ means that you visited some place, but you’re still there. You can say “in” if what you are referring to is something you can be “in.” “I have been to the beach, but I have never been in the ocean.”

Have you been here long meaning?

How long have you been here is asking for the time between when someone arrived, and when the current conversation is taking place (now).

Begin typing your search term above and press enter to search. Press ESC to cancel.

Back To Top