Questions

Which is correct didnt had or didnt have?

Which is correct didnt had or didnt have?

The correct english is “I didn’t have to” as because in a sentence double past tense is never used. In the sentence “I didn’t had to” both the words ‘did’ and ‘had’ are in the past form so wheraeas in the second sentence ‘did’ is a past form but ‘have’ is in the present form.

Did not have is correct?

Originally Answered: Which is correct ” it does not have or it did not have?” Your two examples are both grammatically correct, but are temporally distinct. “It does not have…” is present tense, and refers to an act taking place at the present time. “It did not have…” is past tense, and refers to an action in the past.

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Did not have to sentences?

If we say that somebody didn’t have to or didn’t need to do something, we mean that the action was not necessary and the person did not do it. For Example: It started raining heavily so I didn’t need to water the flowers. (it wasn’t necessary, so I didn’t do that.)

How do you use didn’t have?

“I didn’t have breakfast” is correct. After the auxiliary verb DO, we use the bare infinitive of the full verb, not a tensed form. “I didn’t had breakfast” is wrong.

Did not have to grammar?

To put the modal in past tense, simply use the phrase “DID not have to.” For example: As always, modals are followed by the simple form of a verb. The “to” in “do not have to” is not an infinitive.

Do not have or does not have?

Don’t/have is used with I, you, we, and they. “Don’t have” is used when referring to yourself, or “THEY/WE/YOU don’t have”. “Doesn’t have” is used when referring to a SHE/HE, “she/he doesn’t have”.

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Is it correct to say I don’t have any money?

In American idiomatic English, “I have no money” and “I don’t have money” are equivalent. “I haven’t any money” is also correct, but more popular in other dialects of English (some British idiom? someone help me out).

What is the difference between ‘she has’ and ‘he doesn’t have’?

1) ‘she did not have’ (‘has’ is 3rd person PRESENT tense only) 2) ‘he doesn’t have’ (only the auxiliary ‘do’ takes the 3rd person ‘-s’. Another way to remember is: only one ‘s’ in the verb phrase. (These are not sentences yet– they both need objects, like ‘he doesn’t have a job.’)

What does “I don’t have any dollars” mean?

This statement means, you don’t have up to $10, but you probably have some amount less than $10. So, if “ten” replaces “any” from previous statement, and then if you remove “ten” from my statement just above, you would get: “I don’t have dollars,” which does not sound quite right … much like “I don’t have money.”

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What does didn’t have mean?

It is more commonly found in British English (and perhaps other varieties), but maybe not much anymore. Hadn’t have means, you never owned or had something in you possession at any given time, Didn’t have means, at the time of asking, you did not have something on yourself…