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Anonymous Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

Having, are, is

Hi again!

Am unsure of the following...

"Having two degrees is enough for me"

Assuming "is" is used correctly here, could anyone be so kind as to explain why this is the case.

Thanks.

Rob
  

Top answer

The clause ( having 2 degrees ) is the subject, not the 2 degrees themselves. It is a single condition, therefore: is .

  • The clause ( having 2 degrees ) is the subject, not the 2 degrees themselves.
  • It is a single condition, therefore: is .
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1 Answers
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The clause (having 2 degrees) is the subject, not the 2 degrees themselves. It is a single condition, therefore: is.

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