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Aqua park 450 Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Which to use include or includes?

Entry of attendance which include/includes absent, leave, sick leave, half day and SMS to parent or guardian

  

Top answer

It should be "includes", but there are some other possible issues. At minimum I would put a comma after "attendance". I can't really tell without more context whether "Entry of attendance" is the right phrase.

  • It should be "includes", but there are some other possible issues.
  • At minimum I would put a comma after "attendance".
  • I can't really tell without more context whether "Entry of attendance" is the right phrase.
  • Assuming that "absent", "leave" etc.
  • are the actual entries that people can write, I would consider putting these in quotation marks.
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2 Answers
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It should be "includes", but there are some other possible issues. At minimum I would put a comma after "attendance". I can't really tell without more context whether "Entry of attendance" is the right phrase. Assuming that "absent", "leave" etc. are the actual entries that people can write, I would consider putting these in quotation marks.

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"Entry of attendance which include/includes absent, leave, sick leave, half day and SMS to parent or guardian of the whole School on Web Portal which is done on daily basis".

What to use include or includes in this sentences which is grammatically correct? Is there any other correction you want to make or recommend?

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