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Omar laverde Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Who Has

Always when you ask a question like 'Who has ....' is always with 'has' ? is there any example when you have to use 'Who have' ?
  

Top answer

What an interesting question. No. ", although it would be good grammar if you expected more than one to have.

  • What an interesting question.
  • No.
  • ", although it would be good grammar if you expected more than one to have.
  • Stick with "has".
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3 Answers
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What an interesting question. No. I've never heard or said "Who have ...?", although it would be good grammar if you expected more than one to have. Stick with "has".
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omar laverde Always when you ask a question like 'Who has ....' is always with 'has' ? is there any example when you have to use 'Who have' ?
No. There's no "Who have ...?" as the beginning of a question.

You may as well add "Who?" to the traditional conjugation scheme:

I have
you have
he, she, it, Who? has

we have
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As the subject of a verb, 'who' is always followed by a third person singular verb form.

As the object, 'who' can be followed by 'has' - Who has John fired recently?. Some people still insist that only whom is correct there, but 'who' is very commonly heard, in British English, at least.

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