Had experienced or had experience?
“Have had” represents the present perfect of the verb “to have,” and “have experienced” is the present perfect of the verb “to experience.” It seems to me that there is no difference between the two sentences in terms of meaning.
Is had experienced correct?
You should use “have experienced”. The explanation tells you not to use “had experienced”. I agree with that explanation.
Have had experienced meaning?
This is correct. This is the past perfect of the verb “experience.” Usually this is used tos to describe something that happened in the past before another event. Explanation provided by a TextRanch English expert.
Is it correct to say experience in?
The noun “experience” can be used with the prepositions “with”,” in”, and “of” depending on the context. We use “experience in” for the context of a field of study or work. We use “experience with” to describe the tools you use. We use “experience of” for personal physical experiences.
Have VS had had?
Have had is in the present perfect tense. Had is the past form of the verb ‘to have’ which is also used as an auxiliary verb in the past perfect tense. Have had is only used with plural nouns and pronouns while had is used with both singular and plural nouns and pronouns.
How do you use had?
When you need to talk about two things that happened in the past and one event started and finished before the other one started, place “had” before the main verb for the event that happened first. Here are some more examples of when to use “had” in a sentence: “Chloe had walked the dog before he fell asleep.”
Can you say have had 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.
How do you use the word experience in a sentence?
“They found the whole experience useless.” “We hope the trip will be a good learning experience.” “She told the story of her near-death experience.” “He talked about his trip being a spiritual experience.”
Is Had I had correct?
Yes it is grammatically right. The sentence is in the past perfect tense. When there are two complete actions in the past, you use the past perfect tense to describe the action that happened first, and the action that followed should be in the simple past tense. I had had my breakfast, when she arrived.
Is had past tense?
The past tense and past participle form is had.
What is ‘experience?
This ‘experience’ is the familiarity and knowledge you have of something because you have used it for a period of time. This ‘experience’ is non-countable; it is not one event that happened to you. It is something you have gained over a period of time by doing something. Just like knowledge, understanding, or familiarity, you can’t count it.
What is the past perfect of the verb experience?
This is the past perfect of the verb “experience.” Usually this is used tos to describe something that happened in the past before another event.
What is the relevance of past experience?
The present relevance of his past experience is what matters (he knows what it’s like to date a cop and the sequel of events that one has to go through when dating a cop). I’ve experienced that is not even a likely response in this context as far as I think Experience as a noun means “practical contact with a sequel of events.”
What is the difference between’have had’and’have experienced’?
“Have had” represents the present perfect of the verb “to have,” and “have experienced” is the present perfect of the verb “to experience.” It seems to me that there is no difference between the two sentences in terms of meaning.