0
Jackson6612 Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Here’s to hoping, just don’t leave the outcome up to everyone else

Hi

Please help me with the queries below. Thank you.

1: Is one supposed to use "have" instead of "has" after "may"? e.g. May everyone has good time. / May everyone have good time.

2: What does "Here's to" mean? "Here’s to hoping, just don’t leave the outcome up to everyone else."
  

Top answer

This one is correct: May everyone have good time. , before you drink something as in a toast, used for making a toast to someone or something

  • This one is correct: May everyone have good time.
  • , before you drink something as in a toast, used for making a toast to someone or something
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
This one is correct: May everyone have good time.

"here's to" is a common expression used in the following meanings:

to express good wishes for someone,

to say you are pleased about something, etc., before you drink something as in a toast,

used for making a toast to someone or something
0
Jackson66121: Is one supposed to use "have" instead of "has" after "may"? e.g. May everyone has good time. / May everyone have good time.
Yes. You are right.

Jackson66122: What does "Here's to" mean? "Here’s to hoping, just don’t leave the outcome up to everyone else
Here's to *** is a toast - where everyone
0
AnonymousThis one is correct: May everyone have a good time. "
Tiny correction -- your eye probably glossed over it with your focus on the verb.

Related Questions