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Cup cake Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

subject verb agreement, no.3

Hi Everyone,

I know I've asked similar questions before and I do get it, but occasionally I still get stumped... Emotion: surprise

Is this sentence correct?

'My horse and its saddle have to be cleaned.'

or

'My horse and its saddle has to be cleaned.'

I want to clean both things; horse and saddle.

or

Can we say both?

Thanks.
Miss curious. Emotion: it wasnt me
  

Top answer

I want to clean both things; horse and saddle . My horse and its saddle have to be cleaned.

  • I want to clean both things; horse and saddle .
  • My horse and its saddle have to be cleaned.
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5 Answers
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I want to clean both things; horse and saddle.

My horse and its saddle have to be cleaned.
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Thank you tamguatlay.
I'm not going nuts after all.
Emotion: poolparty
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tamguatlayI want to clean both things; horse and saddle.My horse and its saddle have to be cleaned.
What about this: My horse together with its saddle has (have?) to be cleaned.?
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Anonymous tamguatlayI want to clean both things; horse and saddle.My horse and its saddle have to be cleaned.What about this: My horse together with its saddle has (have?) to be cleaned.?
My horse together with its saddle has to be cleaned.
My horse ... has to be cleaned. (Ignore the phrase.)
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tamguatlayMy horse ... has to be cleaned. (Ignore the phrase.)
Thanks.

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