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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

"He has an appointment in fifteen minutes." or "He is having an appointment in fifteen minutes."

"He has an appointment in fifteen minutes." or "He is having an appointment in fifteen minutes."

I said it's "He has an appointment in fifteen minutes." But the teacher said it's the second one. So now I'm trying to prove that it's the first one. What are your opinions?
  

Top answer

" He has an appointment in fifteen minutes. The other is possible in conversation, but unusual.

  • " He has an appointment in fifteen minutes.
  • The other is possible in conversation, but unusual.
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1 Answers
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Anonymous"He has an appointment in fifteen minutes." or "He is having an appointment in fifteen minutes."
He has an appointment in fifteen minutes.

The other is possible in conversation, but unusual.

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