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Which is correct one of my friends has or have?

Which is correct one of my friends has or have?

”One of my friends has” is correct, Here, the subject in this sentence is ”One”. Hence, the verb should also be singular to agree with its subject.

Does the person have or has?

So when we refer to one person possessing something, the word ‘has’ would be used; for e.g., ‘That person has a luxury car.” But when we refer to more than one person possessing something, the terms ‘people’ and ‘have’ would be used, for example: “Those people have luxury cars.”

Have vs have friends?

friends…have. “Friends” is plural, so the plural of the verb is required: “have.”

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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).

Which is correct each have or each has?

Each is singular. Any verb that follows each must be singular. Which means each has is correct, each have is not correct. “Each” is singular, so it is “each [one] has.”

Which is correct anyone have or anyone has?

‘If anyone has a photo’ is correct as ‘anyone’ is singular and needs a matching singular form of the verb (Have). ‘If anyone HAVE a photo’ is not possible. If anyone has a photo is correct because here the pronoun ANYONE is singular so it must take singular verb.

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Is it correct to use ‘friend’s’ or ‘friends’ in a search?

Closed 5 years ago. A quick Google search (actually I use Duckduckgo but “a quick Duck or DDG search” would sound weird…) showed that “friend’s” was a bit more common, whereas a Google user manual or tutorial used “friends’ ” and I (maybe biasly) assume them to use (more) correct grammar. The sentence used in the Google user manual was:

What is a friend’s means of a single friend?

The sentence used in the Google user manual was: Friend’s means of a single friend, friends’ means of multiple friends. General rule: for a single form – noun+’s, for plural form – noun+s’.

What is the difference between who/that/whom and friends?

And there is a link from that gap to the relative word “who/that/whom”, and a link from that relative word to the noun “friends”. They are all linked together. Now, in a traditional grammar perspective, the expected “correct” answer might be the one expecting the relative word “whom”, which is in accusative case.

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What is the correct place of the apostrophe in the word ‘friend’?

Correct place of apostrophe: friend’s or friends’ [duplicate] Ask Question Asked5 years, 5 months ago Active5 years, 5 months ago Viewed78k times 0 This question already has answers here: