With is a preposition, so with different opinions is a prepositional phrase Both participle clauses and prepositional phrases can function as adverbials, and in your examples the meaning is similar. How to use having in english I have come across below statement The customer having left, the criminal takes out a pin from his purse and scrapes off hardened glue from the edges of the keys. Having completed the task, i was free to go
Having completed the task, he was free to go Having completed the task, they were free to go Colonel mustard, having completed the task, did you leave the premises immediately Or did you stick around and murder professor plum in the living room with the candelabra What differences are there between using the present tense 'have', future tense 'will have', and the future progressive tense 'will be having' in the following two sentences (one statement and one Having seen my mother work tirelessly, i was inspired to work hard
Or the participle phrase can be the subject of a sentence In this use it is sometimes called a gerund Here having to replaces you have to am i correct in my opinion Please correct me if i'm wrong about the meanings of those sentences I think one more example could be Employment means you have to work employment means having to work
Again, here having to replaces you have to Do both of these sentences convey the same meaning? As you probably already noticed these two sentences have different meanings I am having spaghetti means 'i am eating spaghetti' whereas i have spaghetti shows possession When verbs are used as both stative and dynamic, many times they have different meanings 'have' is a little more idiomatic in the way it is used in the continuous tense.
He had same problem like my father And he was having same problem like my father (to have/having) exceeded the companyβs annual goals for productivity, all employees in a corporationβs manufacturing division received a bonus I don't choose what is the correct answer to it The words with and having both have the same function, so having both in the sentence is redundant and incorrect It's like, i threw the ball to towards mark.
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