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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Has been v.s have been?

__seat(s) has been reserved in your honor
or
__seat(s) have been reserved in your honor
  

Top answer

a seat has seats have 'in your honour' suggests that the seats have not been reserved for the person you are writing to, but for someone else. ie I honor you by doing something nice for someone else in your name..

  • a seat has seats have 'in your honour' suggests that the seats have not been reserved for the person you are writing to, but for someone else.
  • ie I honor you by doing something nice for someone else in your name..
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1 Answers
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a seat has
seats have

'in your honour' suggests that the seats have not been reserved for the person you are writing to, but for someone else.
ie I honor you by doing something nice for someone else in your name..

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