1. Priyal an umbrella
2. Rajat and Garima
bags.
3. Ashu and Anna
bicycles.
4. The oldman
a stick.
5. We
a car last year
6. Vidushi
fever last week.
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Complete question:
1. Priyal an umbrella
2. Rajat and Garima bags.
3. Ashu and Anna bicycles.
4. The old man a stick.
5. We a car last year
6. Vidushi a fever last week.
Fill in the blanks with has/have/had
Answer:
1. Priyal has an umbrella
2. Rajat and Garima have bags.
3. Ashu and Anna have bicycles.
4. The old man has a stick.
5. We had a car last year
6. Vidushi had a fever last week.
Explanation:
- Subject-action word (verb) understanding alludes to the syntactic idea that the subject of a sentence should line up with the fundamental action word of that equivalent sentence.
- Specifically, solitary subjects take particular action words and plural subjects to take plural action words.
- "Has" indicates the present tense term, in general, which is used along with the pronouns such as he, she, who and singular nouns.
- "Have" is also a present tense term that is preferred along with the pronouns such as you, we, they and plural nouns.
- "Had" is the past form of the transitive verb has and have. (here, last week and last year indicate the past tense.)
- We may use either a singular or a plural subject at any point of view (first person, second person or third person) and since it is used in the past tense, "had" is used as an auxiliary verb to make the past perfect and the past perfect progressive tense.
- Subject + Had + past participle verb
- Subject + Had + been + verb+ ing
- A compound subject includes two or more nouns (or pronouns, noun clauses, or noun phrases) and may be singular or plural.
- When the nouns are joined with the word and (an apple and a banana), the compound subject is usually plural, even if the individual nouns are singular.
- A plural subject requires a plural verb. On occasion, a compound subject uses two nouns to describe one singular subject (for example, my sister and best friend).
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