Is it "Many a time has passed" or "Many a time have passed"?
+
Is it correct to say "We don't need to do that to do this any longer." I'm just used to saying "any more," and "any longer" seems... a little bit awkward.
Top answer
Is it "Many a time has passed" or "Many a time have passed"? Neither. Say eg A lot of time has passed.
— Clive
Is it "Many a time has passed" or "Many a time have passed"?
Neither.
Say eg A lot of time has passed.
" I'm just used to saying "any more," One word: anymore and "any longer" seems...
a little bit awkward.
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.
Is it "Many a time has passed" or "Many a time have passed"? Neither. Say eg A lot of time has passed.
+
Is it correct to say "We don't need to do that to do this any longer." I'm just used to saying "any more," One word: anymore and "any longer" seems... a little bit awkward.