About 21,900 results
Open links in new tab
  1. archaic language - Hath or has? Which one is better to use - English ...

    Feb 24, 2016 · Here I am aware of it, but I am not getting it. The sea hath/has many thousand sands. Hath and has both seem to be same meaning. Which one is better to use? Shall I use hath or has?

  2. Can we use the verb 'hath' in modern English? [closed]

    Nov 28, 2021 · No. Hath is archaic and is not used in current spoken or written English, unless you are deliberately trying to sound very old-fashioned (as in, 400 years out-of-date).

  3. Does it have or has? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Nov 6, 2018 · Generally we use "hads* with he , she , and it. So which one is correct to say ? Does this phone has / have xyz function ? Does his father has / have a car ?

  4. Does she have / Has she usage - English Language Learners Stack …

    Nov 26, 2017 · Does she have a child? Has she a child? In American English, you need to use the auxiliaries do and does with the main verb have to form a question in the present tense. In British …

  5. When do we use haven't had, hadn't had, and didn't have?

    Nov 28, 2022 · I haven't had my breakfast yet [this morning]. I hadn't had my breakfast when I got your phone call yesterday morning. Because I overslept, I didn't have my breakfast until 10 p.m.

  6. "done" vs "have done" - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    I think this sentence is correct. I done something. This is also correct. I have done something. What are the involved tense? How are they different?

  7. Verbs ending in -th - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Jan 26, 2013 · Verbs ending in -eth are an archaic way of forming the 3rd person singular present, so for example: sayeth => says goeth => goes Beyond that, I can't think of any verbs ending in -th that …

  8. meaning of "warbled out these metres meet"

    Aug 15, 2022 · Nor for itself hath any care, But for another gives its ease, And builds a Heaven in Hell's despair." So sung a little Clod of Clay Trodden with the cattle's feet, But a Pebble of the brook …

  9. omission of 'be' verb - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Nov 6, 2019 · It is very little he hath inserted, and that necessary, to show what their offences were, what people, and of what condition they were. The whole proceedings and evidence against them, I …

  10. "He had to do it." VS "He had to have done it."

    Jan 11, 2025 · What do you mean by It couldn't have been done by anybody but him? That could be interpreted two ways - "He is the only person who could have done it" (a deduction about the past) or …