安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- present continuous - Correct use of is having - English Language . . .
We can say; I am having spaghetti or I have spaghetti As you probably already noticed these two sentences have different meanings "I am having spaghetti" means 'I am eating spaghetti' whereas "I have spaghetti" shows possession When verbs are used as both stative and dynamic, many times they have different meanings 'Have' is a little
- grammaticality in context - Confusing between having or to have . . .
The nuance of to have and having is interesting In addition to the matter of present and continuous, this also speaks about the possession and the action Being happy is to have dreams in life - to have here talks a bit more about the possession Being happy is having dreams in life - having here talks a bit more about the action
- How to use Having + V3 and Having been + V3 at the beginning of . . .
Having been involved in many projects, it enabled me to understand real-world challenges But there are some cases that I still do not quite understand Having seen my mother work tirelessly inspired me to study hard Having been involved in many projects enabled me to understand real-world challenges
- Meaning of “having” + past participle - English Language Learners . . .
Having taken a bath, Rajeev sat down to study Maria finished reading the book She wrote a book review on it Having finished reading the book, Maria wrote a book review on it III Why Participles are used to join sentences In this case I don’t understand why the having clause is used and not simple -
- tense - Have vs. Will have vs. Will be having - English Language . . .
1) I HAVE WILL HAVE WILL BE HAVING a test tomorrow morning My thoughts: 'Will have' seems to be the least likely option as it indicates a sudden decision of wanting to take a test as opposed to sitting a scheduled event planned in advance 'Have' is definitely more common than 'will be having', yet I don't see any problems with the latter
- That being so With that said vs Having said this
Having said that, it can be used to burn things It sounds a little strange for the second sentence to follow the first in this way I know that I should not be eating dessert instead of dinner That being so, I am going to order pie This sounds very strange, and the second sentence doesn't follow the first at all
- Having + past participle or Having been + past participl
After having been shot by his enemies, Prince Thrumblestrump fled to Shitterton; Hopefully this makes clear that the distinction is simple one of active vs passive---nothing more complicated than that Just pay attention to the word order---nothing comes between having and the PP, or between having been and the PP!
- The difference between having seen, having to see, and having . . .
He denied having been married The perfect gerund having been refers to a time before denied: He denied that he had been married without having to see or having to hear of one or the other; In this sentence having to is a gerund form of the modal verb have to do something (= need to do something) That means:
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