Is I have had correct grammar?
Have you always had hay fever? ~ I’ve had it every summer since I was 13. Thus, your example sentence, Sazd, I’ve had a headache since early morning, is quite correct. Had had is the past perfect form of have when it is used as a main verb to describe our experiences and actions.
What tense is I have to go?
“I have to go” this sentence is use in present perfect tense. That means you wanna go right now. “I will have to” this sentence is use in future perfect tense. That means you wanna go a few times later or in future.
Where I have to go or where have I to go?
Neither is correct. You have a choice. WHERE MUST I GO or WHERE DO I HAVE TO GO. Remember that if a question starts with a question word such as where, when, what, how, an auxiliary such as DO or MUST comes next.
Have had VS had have?
In the present perfect, the auxiliary verb is always have (for I, you, we, they) or has (for he, she, it). In the past perfect, the auxiliary verb is always had. We use have had in the present perfect when the main verb is also “have”: She has had three children in the past five years.
What is the difference between ‘I had to go’ and ‘I’ve had to?
“I had to go” is the past tense version. e. g. “I had to go to school on Saturday when I was a young boy”. “I’ve had to go” is the present perfect tense version. e.g. “I’ve had to go to the bathroom for 2 hours now (and still have to)”.
How do you use got to go in a sentence?
I got to go. “Got to go” and “get to go” are generally informal. Firstly, in this context, “got” = “have”, even though the tenses dont match. The idea is, if you got something (past tense) OR if you’ve gotten (present perfect) something, you now have it.
Is it correct to say I have to have or I had?
Depending on what you’re trying to say, “I have to have” or “I had to have” can be correct. “I had to had” and “I have to had” are both wrong. (Also, none of these examples is a complete sentence – you must specify what it is that you need.)
What is the difference between “have” and “had”?
(Also, none of these examples is a complete sentence – you must specify what it is that you need.) “Have” is present tense, “had” is past tense, and “to have” – never “to had” – is the infinitive, or basic form, of a verb that can mean either “need” or “possess”.