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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

might have

I guessed Radhakrishan had gone to bevico outlet to celebrate at night as he was alone. He might have in long queue. ( this sentence is correct?)
  

Top answer

I suppose you mean "He might have been in a long queue". The exact connection between this and the previous sentence is not immediately obvious without further context. Neither is the reason why his being alone should be evidence that he had gone to celebrate.

  • I suppose you mean "He might have been in a long queue".
  • The exact connection between this and the previous sentence is not immediately obvious without further context.
  • Neither is the reason why his being alone should be evidence that he had gone to celebrate.
  • Do you mean "a/the Bevco outlet"?
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1 Answers
0
I suppose you mean "He might have been in a long queue". The exact connection between this and the previous sentence is not immediately obvious without further context. Neither is the reason why his being alone should be evidence that he had gone to celebrate.

Do you mean "a/the Bevco outlet"?

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