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JimmyH Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Grammar

1) There is scarcely been a day in which you haven't logged on to facebook.
2) There is scarcely been a day in which you haven't tripped while playing football.

Do both the sentence sound right?
  

Top answer

There has scarcely been a day..... (use of the present perfect = has/have/had + past participle)

  • There has scarcely been a day.....
  • (use of the present perfect = has/have/had + past participle)
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5 Answers
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There has scarcely been a day..... (use of the present perfect = has/have/had + past participle)
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OOPS. LITERALLY forgot to use HAS. Are there any other mistake/error in the sentences?
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You mean both are right in terms of grammar?
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I made no corrections, so you can assume they're right.

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