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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Who

1) who have come to the party enjoyed or who has come to the party enjoyed
2) WHO HAS SEATED THERE IS PETER
3) WHO HAVE SEATED THERE ARE BOYS
  

Top answer

Anonymous 1) who have come to the party enjoyed or who has come to the party enjoyed 2) WHO HAS SEATED THERE IS PETER 3) WHO HAVE SEATED THERE ARE BOYSMay we know whether or not you consider these complete sentences? ) In the first example, if "who" has an antecedent, it will determine the number of the auxilliary verb. I believe if you use "who" or "whoever" as a subject pronoun (rather than as a relative pronoun), it may be singular or plural.

  • Anonymous 1) who have come to the party enjoyed or who has come to the party enjoyed 2) WHO HAS SEATED THERE IS PETER 3) WHO HAVE SEATED THERE ARE BOYSMay we know whether or not you consider these complete sentences?
  • ) In the first example, if "who" has an antecedent, it will determine the number of the auxilliary verb.
  • I believe if you use "who" or "whoever" as a subject pronoun (rather than as a relative pronoun), it may be singular or plural.
  • I may be wrong.
  • If you would always use complete sentences in your examples, it would be more work for you and less for us!
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1 Answers
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Anonymous1) who have come to the party enjoyed or who has come to the party enjoyed
2) WHO HAS SEATED THERE IS PETER
3) WHO HAVE SEATED THERE ARE BOYSMay we know whether or not you consider these complete sentences?
(They could be, but the usage is rare.)

In the first example, if "who" has an antecedent, it will determine the number of the auxilliary

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