0
WesternAmerican Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

''Everything that could have gone wrong in my wedding, have''

Hi,

What would be the best choice for the aforementioned sentence I supplied?

1. Everything that could have gone wrong in my wedding, have.
2. Everything that could have gotten wrong in my wedding, had.

I would go with number 1.
  

Top answer

Everything that could have gone wrong with my wedding has gone wrong.

  • Everything that could have gone wrong with my wedding has gone wrong.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

12 Answers
0
Everything that could have gone wrong with my wedding has gone wrong.
0
WesternAmericanHi,

What would be the best choice for the aforementioned sentence I supplied?

1. Everything that could have gone wrong in my wedding, have.
2. Everything that could have gotten wrong in my wedding, had.


The word "aforementioned" means "mentioned earlier". (I think you should write "Which sentence below is
0
Everything that could have gone wrong in my wedding has.

Is the sentence correct?

Many thanks.
0
Hi guys,

I think I'd naturally say Everything that could have gone wrong in my wedding did (go wrong). That's assuming the wedding is finished and in the past, of course, which is the sense I get from the sentence.

Best wishes, Clive
0
Hi Clive

What if the wedding has ended a short time ago, and the couple are complaining about what went wrong with the wedding? Would the sentence below be correct?

Everything that could have gone wrong in my wedding has.

Many thanks.
0
Hi,

What if the wedding has ended a short time ago, and the couple are complaining about what went wrong with the wedding? Would the sentence below be correct?

Everything that could have gone wrong in my wedding has. This still sounds awkward to me.

Clive
0
Thank you very much.
So, I should use better when I have to choose between 2 different options, whilst I should use 'super' when it comes to 3 or more choices.
0
WesternAmericanThank you very much.
So, I should use better when I have to choose between 2 different options, whilst I should use 'super' when it comes to 3 or more choices.
Since there are two sentences, you should use 'better', not 'best' unless there are three or more sentences.

Are you referring

Related Questions