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Does your brother has or have?
The correct sentence is “my brother has a good job”. The simple reason being that “has” is the singular form of the verb “to have” and your brother is just one person. “Have” on the other hand is the plural form of the verb “to have” which can be used when the subject is plural (more than one person).
Does he has a sister or does he have a sister?
‘Has he a sister? ‘ is in the present perfect tense. ‘He has a sister’, is the sentence, ‘he’ and ‘has’ are inverted to form the question.
Who all have or has?
I would like to add something to the answers of the first 3–4 experts. If ‘all’ is used with a countable noun, a plural verb ‘have’ should be used and if it is used with a mass/uncountable noun ‘has’ should be used. “All” as a unit has been done.
Has to be used in sentence?
Has-to sentence example. Someone has to cover the calls. It has to be in his vehicle. No one has to like me.
Is it correct to say ‘Have your sisters passed their exams?
There is only one sister. The verb is ‘has’. Third person singular (your sister is ‘she’ – third person singular) takes ‘has’. You would use ‘have’ if there were two or more sisters (plural third person, they). ‘Have your SISTERS passed THEIR exams?’
Can I use “have” and “your sister” in the same sentence?
I justify my response by clarifying that “your sister” is an absent subject, which we use has and not have with. Just saying, I personally use “have” sometimes although not grammatically correct, the listener would catch the same function. So feel free to use both.
How do you use the word had in a sentence?
Had is used in the past tense. Use have when the subject is a plural noun. Have is also used with the pronouns I, we, they and you. They have a nice apartment in the city. I have a sister.
Is it correct to say they have or has?
Here, have is the correct choice because the subject (they) is a third person plural pronoun. How do you use has? Has is the conjugation of to have that’s used when: speaking in the third person singular (he, she, and it).