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Anonymous Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

To have something done

I am trying to work out what 'I've just had my hair cut' is in terms of form.
  

Top answer

Hi, I am trying to work out what 'I've just had my hair cut' is in terms of form. Swan discusses this in his Practical English usage, section 286. He describes it as 'have + object + past participle'.

  • Hi, I am trying to work out what 'I've just had my hair cut' is in terms of form.
  • Swan discusses this in his Practical English usage, section 286.
  • He describes it as 'have + object + past participle'.
  • Best wishes, Clive
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2 Answers
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Hi,

I am trying to work out what 'I've just had my hair cut' is in terms of form.

Swan discusses this in his Practical English usage, section 286. He describes it as 'have + object + past participle'.

Best wishes, Clive
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I have just caused this: Someone cut my hair.

"in terms of form"?

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