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Had he worked hard he could have passed?
Answer: He has worked hard, he must have passed. Explanation: Had should become Has and come after the subject.
What is correct we’ve or we?
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”: I’m not feeling well.
Can we use past tense with didn t?
We use didn’t (did not) to make a negative sentence in the past tense. This is for regular AND irregular verbs in English. Both don’t and doesn’t in the present tense become didn’t in the past tense.
Has she worked hard she Dash passed?
Answer: The given sentence can be written as “Had she worked hard, she would have passed”.
Had I worked hard I would have passed?
“Had he worked hard, he would have passed”. It is the past participle form of the term have. It is often used instead of ‘if’ to start a sentence that applies to something that should have happened but did not. Thus, the correct sentence is – “Had he worked hard, he would have passed”.
Why we use had?
When you need to talk about two things that happened in the past and one event started and finished before the other one started, place “had” before the main verb for the event that happened first. Here are some more examples of when to use “had” in a sentence: “Chloe had walked the dog before he fell asleep.”
Is had been a past perfect?
The past perfect is made from the verb had and the past participle of a verb: I had finished the work. The past perfect continuous is made from had been and the -ing form of a verb: I had been working there for a year.
Did you go to church is it correct?
“Did you go to church?” is the correct one. Always remember to add present tense when using the word ‘did’. For instance, “Did you eat?” is correct and “Did you ate?” is incorrect.
Why do we use the past perfect?
We usually use the past perfect to make it clear which action happened first. Maybe we are already talking about something in the past and we want to mention something else that is further back in time.
What is the past perfect simple form of had?
Past perfect simple: form + (full form) had + (short form) ’d − (full form) had not − (short form) hadn’t ? + Had I, she, he, it, you, we, they
What is the verb form of worked?
We use had + the -ed form of the verb. worked. worked. worked? worked? The past perfect refers to time up to a point in the past (time up to then), just as the present perfect refers to something that happened in the time up to the moment of speaking (time up to now):
Where do people run into trouble in past perfect sentences?
Where people run into trouble is when the verb that ought to be in past perfect is to have. Because that’s when you run into the awkward-sounding, and seemingly redundant, had had. Shelby had had the ability to fly long before her mother found out. Yeah, sorry, that’s correct.