Has experienced or had experienced?
Present perfect. I, have experienced. you, have experienced. he/she/it, has experienced.
Has experienced meaning?
In most languages it’s called the plu-perfect (plu- as in “plus” meaning “more than”), meaning if “I experienced” is done (“perfected”), “I had experienced” means “more than done,” or done/perfected at a time before that.
Is I have experienced correct?
In this case, I’ve experienced that is not a likely response because one could normally say “I have done that.” Present perfect is also used for past experience, so there’s no need of saying, “I’ve experienced that,” whereas “I’ve had that experience” has some nuance.
When we use have had in a sentence?
Had had is the past perfect form of have when it is used as a main verb to describe our experiences and actions. We use the past perfect when we are talking about the past and want to refer back to an earlier past time, Madiini.
When to use have had together in a sentence?
Have you always had hay fever? ~ I’ve had it every summer since I was 13. Thus, your example sentence, Sazd, I’ve had a headache since early morning, is quite correct. Had had is the past perfect form of have when it is used as a main verb to describe our experiences and actions.
When to use has had together in a sentence?
We use have had in the present perfect when the main verb is also “have”: I’m not feeling well. I have had a headache all day. She has had three children in the past five years.
Has or had had?
You have to use “had had” if something has been done long back, not recently. But if something has been done recently, then you can use “have had” or “has had” depending on the pronoun. For example, I have had a good lunch this afternoon.
Why we use have had together?
Where we use have had?
Had been Vs have been?
“Had been” is used to mean that something happened in the past and has already ended. “Have been” and “has been” are used to mean that something began in the past and has lasted into the present time.