Who Has Line Dancing Near Me

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.

who has line dancing near me 1

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 ...

who has line dancing near me 2

When to use 'is' and 'has' - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

Today my friend asked me if you can use "has" instead of "have" here. I'm not sure how to explain the grammar simply. ⑤"Since there is no other food on the table, and each of them have small plat...

who has line dancing near me 4

Can anyone tell me where we have to use "has" and where we have to use "have"? I am confused. Can anyone explain me in a simple way?

who has line dancing near me 5

I have read a similar question here but that one talks about the usage of has/have with reference to "anyone". Here, I wish to ask a question of the form: Does anyone has/have a black pen? What ...

who has line dancing near me 6

auxiliary verbs - Does anyone "has" or "have" - English Language ...

It's helpful here to undo the subject-verb inversion that makes this sentence a question and turn it into a statement: Trump's political views has changed on Israel's war in Gaza. [incorrect] or Trump's political views have changed on Israel's war in Gaza. [correct] The subject is views and the verb is has/have changed. Has always goes with a singular subject, and have with a plural one. Since ...