Fortune on MSN: Dirty Jobs host Mike Rowe is giving away $10 million to get Gen Z into trades—and says the skills gap has never been worse
Dirty Jobs host Mike Rowe is giving away $10 million to get Gen Z into trades—and says the skills gap has never been worse
Inc.com: Mike Rowe’s $10 Million Bet: Skilled Trades Are Becoming the Ultimate AI-Proof Career
With AI putting white-collar jobs at risk and employers scrambling to fill trade roles, Mike Rowe is doubling his foundation's scholarship program for learning trades.
Mike Rowe’s $10 Million Bet: Skilled Trades Are Becoming the Ultimate AI-Proof Career
Inc.com on MSN: Mike Rowe’s $10M bet: Skilled trades are becoming the ultimate AI-proof career
With AI putting white-collar jobs at risk and employers scrambling to fill trade roles, Mike Rowe is doubling his foundation’s scholarship program for learning trades.
Mike Rowe’s $10M bet: Skilled trades are becoming the ultimate AI-proof career
I have a question about where to use is and has. Examples: Tea is come or Tea has come Lunch is ready or Lunch has ready He is come back or He has come back She is assigned for work or ...
When to use 'is' and 'has' - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
The answer in both instances is 'have'. It is ungrammatical to use 'has' in questions that begin with 'Do' or 'Does'. In these types of questions the verb 'do' is conjugated based on whether the noun is first, second or third person (eg Do I, Do you or , Does he). The 'have' part of the question is not conjugated and appears as the bare infinitive regardless of the person of the noun.