- Was and were in sentences?
- When to use was or were grammar?
- Was and were past tense?
- Has have use exercise?
Was and were in sentences?
When to use were
Whereas was is the singular past tense of to be, were is used for both the third person plural past tense (they and we) and the second person past tense (you). In the past indicative, were acts similar to was. “They were at the store,” you could say, for example.
When to use was or were grammar?
As I said above, was and were are in the past tense, but they are used differently. Was is used in the first person singular (I) and the third person singular (he, she, it). Were is used in the second person singular and plural (you, your, yours) and first and third person plural (we, they). I was driving to the park.
Was and were past tense?
If you want to remember easily, you can think of was/were as the past tense form of the auxiliary verbs am, is and are. Generally, “was is used for singular objects and “were” is used for plural objects. So, you will use “was” with I, he, she and it while you will use “were” with you, we and they.
Has have use exercise?
They
- - My parents. have. has. a beautiful house in the city.
- - I. have. has. a fantastic apartment in Toronto.
- - My father. have. has. a new job.
- - My brother. have. has. a lot of friends.
- - They. has. have. an English test tomorrow.
- - This woman. have. has. seven children.
- - We. has. have. a lot of money.
- - They. have. has.