Which form of verb is used after have not?

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Which form of verb is used after have not?

1.2. Negative forms of the main verb to have.

Person 1st / 2nd sing 3rd sing
tense I / you he, she, etc
Present. do not have / don’t have does not have/ doesn’t have
Preterit did not have / didn’t have
.Present perfect haven’t had hasn’t had

What tense is have not?

“Have not” is an auxiliary of the present perfect tense, and it’s used to say that you don’t have the experience of doing something, or you have not (yet) finished an action.

Which form of verb is used with has been?

Present perfect progressive tense describes an action that began in the past, continues in the present, and may continue into the future. This tense is formed by using has/have been and the present participle of the verb (the verb form ending in -ing).

Can we use past tense after have?

The present perfect tense uses “have + verbed” to describe something that occurred in the past and has either present consequences or is still occurring. The structure uses the past participle instead of the simple past tense form of the verb.

Can we use past tense with have?

The base form of the verb is have. The present participle is having. The past tense and past participle form is had. The present and past forms are often contracted in everyday speech, especially when have is being used as an auxiliary verb.

When to use have not or has not?

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.

Is has present or past?

When to use have has had?

‘Had’ is the past tense of both ‘has’ and ‘have’.

  1. have. Have is used with some pronouns and plural nouns:
  2. has. Has is used with the third person singular.
  3. contractions. I have = I’ve.
  4. negative contractions.
  5. ‘have’ and ‘has’ in questions.
  6. ‘have got’ and ‘have’
  7. ‘have’ and ‘has’ verb tenses.
  8. modal verbs: ‘have to’

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