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Anonymous Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Grammar

i confuse to use have and had in one sentence at a time.could you explain me
  

Top answer

Your question is not very clear. Do you mean you confuse "used to have" and "had"? Or you confuse "have" and "had"?

  • Your question is not very clear.
  • Do you mean you confuse "used to have" and "had"?
  • Or you confuse "have" and "had"?
  • When you ask about words or phrases, use quotes ("like this") or italics ( like this ) to distinguish the words you are asking about from the words of the question itself.
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2 Answers
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Your question is not very clear. Do you mean you confuse "used to have" and "had"? Or you confuse "have" and "had"?

When you ask about words or phrases, use quotes ("like this") or italics (like this) to distinguish the words you are asking about from the words of the question itself.
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If I may guess:

You can use two verb tenses in the same sentence, Anon. It just depends on the relative time of each action:

I had breakfast at 6:00 this morning, I'm having lunch now, and I will have dinner at 7:00 tonight.

If you have a different question, please ask us– following Mr Wordy's advice, please.

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