What is the correct usage of “have”/”has” and “not has” in a sentence other than “hav”/”has”?

How do English tensu00ades and asu00adpects respond

  • to one another? What are
  1. the best answers that I ever heard? I’ve heard about it.

  2. I knew him. I can’t really be around him. I can’t stop him. We have met. I have known him. I have known him.

  3. Is he really good? He played really well.

What is your opinion on these issues and why?

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1 Answer(s)

The examples given are instances of present perfect tense contrasted with past tense. The present perfect generally emphasizes the present importance of past events, as opposed to a simple past tense, which in English may denote a completed action. Without context it’s hard to read the definition of friends here, but for the sake of argument, the simple past tense (“I knew him”) has to mean that the acquaintanceship itself ended at some point.

The third example (“He has played really well”) seems to summarize the past (leading to a present state of affairs), while a simple past tense (“He played really well”) might point to a specific (completed) past event.

Answered on March 2, 2021.
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