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【How-to】Have came or have come

Have come Vs have came?

The past participle of the verb to come is come, so you should say “I have come to a place where…”. came is the past tense (or preterite), so you would say “I came to a place where…”. Show activity on this post. “I have come to a place where[…]” is correct, as I have come is the Present Perfect tense.

Is have came correct?

Have came is incorrect. It would either be phrased as the first one or phrased as had came. In this case, had came would imply that the people im question had already come and left. It also implies that it is more in the distant past than the first one.

Have come or have came a long way?

Definition of ‘have come a long way’

If you say that someone or something has come a long way, you mean that they have developed, progressed, or become very successful. He has come a long way since the days he could only afford one meal a day.

Has Come and have come?

Only the first one is correct because the basic form of perfect tense is have/has/had + past participle. Come is a confusing word in English because its plain form and its past participle form are the same.

Have came up or come up?

come up with ​Definitions and Synonymspresent tensehe/she/itcomes up withpresent participlecoming up withpast tensecame up withpast participlecome up with

Has and have difference?

While the verb to have has many different meanings, its primary meaning is “to possess, own, hold for use, or contain.” Have and has indicate possession in the present tense (describing events that are currently happening). Have is used with the pronouns I, you, we, and they, while has is used with he, she, and it.

Have became or have become?

‘have become’ is correct; ‘have became’ is not correct.

What is the past tense of have?

Have verb forms

InfinitivePresent ParticiplePast Tense
havehavinghad

Has had have?

The verb have has the forms: have, has, having, had. The base form of the verb is have. The present participle is having. The past tense and past participle form is had.

How do I use have become?

have become” is the only correct tense for this sentence. It’s true that they became extinct in the last three centuries, but the emphasis is that at present they are extinct. So the present perfect is used. Past perfect is not appropriate because there is no reference to two past times, one before the other.

Has have had become or?

Both are correct. Had become (auxiliary+become) is the past participle form. For example, “Someone had become ill.” Became is the past form. For example, “Someone became ill.” The former sentence suggests something already happened in the past, while the latter means a previous event.

What verb tense is have become?

PRESENT PERFECT TENSE: Have become/has become. you have become. they have become. PAST PERFECT TENSE: Had become (the pluperfect tense).

What is have become?

“have become” is a present perfect tense whereas “became” is a simple past tense. The verb “become” conjugated form: simple present: become. present participle: becoming.

What verb tense is have been?

The present perfect continuous tense (also known as the present perfect progressive tense) shows that something started in the past and is continuing at the present time. The present perfect continuous is formed using the construction has/have been + the present participle (root + -ing).

Is have a noun or verb?

verb (used with object), present singular 1st person have,2nd have or (Archaic) hast,3rd has or (Archaic) hath,present plural have;past singular 1st person had,2nd had or (Archaic) hadst or had·dest,3rd had,past plural had;past participle had;present participle hav·ing.

Have VS had had?

Have had is in the present perfect tense. Had is the past form of the verb ‘to have’ which is also used as an auxiliary verb in the past perfect tense. Have had is only used with plural nouns and pronouns while had is used with both singular and plural nouns and pronouns.

Has been or have been?

What is this? “Have been” is used in the present continuous perfect tense in the first, second, and third person plural form whereas “has been” is used in the singular form only for the third person.

Has been or have been examples?

Usage of “Have Been & Has Been”

When we are talking about the present: If the subject of a sentence is I – You – We – They or a plural noun (cars, birds, children) we use ‘have been’. Examples: ☛A total of five cars have been stolen from the city center.

Is have been past tense?

The present perfect (e.g. “have been”) has both a present tense and a past tense in it. The present tense is seen in the present tense verb “have”, and the past tense is seen in the past participle verb of the perfect construction (e.g. “been”).

Has and have singular or plural?

Has is the third person singular present tense. Have is the first and second person singular present and plural tenses and the third person plural present tense.

Has and have sample sentences?

Have or Has

  • “He has a pet dog.” “She has a boyfriend.” “It has rained all day” (present perfect) …
  • ‘You’ and ‘I’ use have. “You have a nice apartment.” “I have a problem.”
  • Plural nouns use have. “Dogs have better personalities than cats.” …
  • Singular nouns and uncountable nouns use has. “The traffic has made me late.”