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Teal lime Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Have got

Would you please explain when you use "have got" in the simple present and when you use "have got/gotten" with "got/gotten" being the past participle of the verb "to get"?

Thank you.

  

Top answer

In "have got/gotten", the word "got/gotten" is always grammatically the past participle of "get". However, in addition to other meanings, "have got" has idiomatically acquired a present-tense sense of "have" or "possess" through a process like: I have got (= obtained) (in the past) -> I have got (= have, possess) (now)

  • In "have got/gotten", the word "got/gotten" is always grammatically the past participle of "get".
  • However, in addition to other meanings, "have got" has idiomatically acquired a present-tense sense of "have" or "possess" through a process like: I have got (= obtained) (in the past) -> I have got (= have, possess) (now)
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1 Answers
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In "have got/gotten", the word "got/gotten" is always grammatically the past participle of "get". However, in addition to other meanings, "have got" has idiomatically acquired a present-tense sense of "have" or "possess" through a process like:

I have got (= obtained) (in the past) -> I have got (= have, possess) (now)

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