Henrik
Hulpleerkracht
witch sentence is correct "I`ve" or "I have"?
23 mrt. 2016 09:01
Antwoorden · 11
1
They are the same, as Kenny Wong says, but there is a difference in use between "have" as an auxiliary and "have" as a possessive verb. When "have" is an auxiliary verb, both dialects use the contraction, especially in speech. "I have been to store" and "I've been to the store" are both correct. You almost always use the contracted form in speech. I see them both in writing. "I have" is probably preferable in formal writing. When "have" is the possessive verb, "I have a book", North American English NEVER contracts the "have". I think only "grammatical" verbs (auxiliaries and modals) are contracted, as a rule (and negative endings). My impression is that this possessive "have" CAN be contracted in UK English, at least in speech: "I've three pounds". But I could be wrong about UK English: I hope someone who speaks UK English will comment on this.
23 maart 2016
1
These are not sentences. They are fragments. The problem is, "have" can work as an auxiliary (helping) verb or as a main verb. Even as a main verb, the meaning is more than simply "to possess". You will need to give proper sentences if you want a proper explanation - otherwise, we're all guessing.
23 maart 2016
They are the same ( I've is the shortened version )
23 maart 2016
They're basically the same.
23 maart 2016
They're both fine.. Also I'm not sure if this was a typo but you should say which, not witch
23 maart 2016
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