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Usenet Posted 19 years ago
Usage

Always wear or wears

Hi,
Please advise which of the following sentence is correct :
1) She always wear red shoes
2) She always wears red shoes

Thank you.
  

Top answer

[nq:1]Hi, Please advise which of the following sentence is correct : 1) She always wear red shoes 2) She always wears red shoes[/nq] 'She' is the subject and is 3rd person singular, requiring a 3rd person singular verb. 'Wears' is the 3rd person singular form of the verb 'to wear'. You figure it out.

  • [nq:1]Hi, Please advise which of the following sentence is correct : 1) She always wear red shoes 2) She always wears red shoes[/nq] 'She' is the subject and is 3rd person singular, requiring a 3rd person singular verb.
  • 'Wears' is the 3rd person singular form of the verb 'to wear'.
  • You figure it out.
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22 Answers
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[nq:1]Hi, Please advise which of the following sentence is correct : 1) She always wear red shoes 2) She always wears red shoes[/nq]
'She' is the subject and is 3rd person singular, requiring a 3rd person singular verb.
'Wears' is the 3rd person singular form of the verb 'to wear'. You figure it out.
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[nq:1]You figure it out.[/nq]
Such an angry reply was quite unnecessary. Your wife leave you or something?
GFH
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[nq:2]You figure it out.[/nq]
[nq:1]Such an angry reply was quite unnecessary. Your wife leave you or something?[/nq]
Such a dishonest reply was quite unnecessary. You snipped the precedomg lines
[nq:1]'She' is the subject and is 3rd person singular, requiring a 3rd person singular verb. 'Wears' is the 3rd person singular form of the verb 'to wear'.which gave all the information necess
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[nq:2]You figure it out.[/nq]
[nq:1]Such an angry reply was quite unnecessary. Your wife leave you or something?[/nq]
Such a dishonest reply was quite unnecessary. You snipped the preceding lines
[nq:1]'She' is the subject and is 3rd person singular, requiring a 3rd person singular verb. 'Wears' is the 3rd person singular form of the verb 'to wear'.which gave all the information necess
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[nq:2]You figure it out.[/nq]
[nq:1]Such an angry reply was quite unnecessary. Your wife leave you or something?[/nq]
I saw no anger; I saw boredom.
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[nq:1]Hi, Please advise which of the following sentence is correct : 1) She always wear red shoes 2) She always wears red shoes Thank you.[/nq]
That depends on whether you are using an indicative mood of the verb or an imperative on. For the former, you should say "wears". But for the latter, say "wear".
Stupid question, 'cause I'm sure you already know the answer!
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[nq:2]Hi, Please advise which of the following sentence is correct : 1) She always wear red shoes 2) She always wears red shoes Thank you.[/nq]
[nq:1]That depends on whether you are using an indicative mood of the verb or an imperative on. For the former, you should say "wears". But for the latter, say "wear". Stupid question, 'cause I'm sure you already know the answer![/nq]
Is it? I assu
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[nq:2]Hi, Please advise which of the following sentence is correct : 1) She always wear red shoes 2) She always wears red shoes Thank you.[/nq]
[nq:1]That depends on whether you are using an indicative mood of the verb or an imperative on. For the former, you should say "wears". But for the latter, say "wear".[/nq]
What on Earth are you talking about?
"She always wear red shoes" is ind
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[nq:1]What on Earth are you talking about? "She always wear red shoes" is indicative and incorrect. It could never be construed as imperative. I suggest you research third-person imperatives in English. It shouldn't take you long.[/nq]
Somebody open the door.
Everybody shut their eyes.
Parents with children go to the front.
Nobody move.
Men in the front row take one step forwar
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[nq:2]What on Earth are you talking about? "She always wear ... research third-person imperatives in English. It shouldn't take you long.[/nq]
[nq:1]Somebody open the door. Everybody shut their eyes. Parents with children go to the front. Nobody move. Men in the front row take one step forward. And quite similarly: She always wear red shoes. All are examples of third-person imperatives.[/nq]

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