WCTV: Read Along: Julie reads ‘I Wish That I Had Duck Feet’
MutualArt.com: I Wish That I Had Duck Feet, I Can Read with My Eyes Shut!, Hooray for Diffendorfer Day!, Daisy-Head Mayzie, The Secret Art of Dr. Seuss, Oh, the Places You’ll Go
I Wish That I Had Duck Feet, I Can Read with My Eyes Shut!, Hooray for Diffendorfer Day!, Daisy-Head Mayzie, The Secret Art of Dr. Seuss, Oh, the Places You’ll Go, ca. 20th – 21st centuries ...
I Wish That I Had Duck Feet, I Can Read with My Eyes Shut!, Hooray for Diffendorfer Day!, Daisy-Head Mayzie, The Secret Art of Dr. Seuss, Oh, the Places You’ll Go
15 There's no special magic with " had had ", they don't really go together as a pair anymore than " had wanted " go together. So don't worry so much about how to use " had had " as a unit of grammar, they will come together naturally when you want to express the verb ' to have ' in the past perfect.
For example, what is the difference between the following two sentences: I had a bad day I had had a bad day
The past perfect form of have is had had (had + past participle form of have). The past perfect tense is used when we are talking about the past and want to refer back to an earlier past time.
grammar - Use of "have had" , "had had", "has had" - English Language ...
7 He had come would be correct, as that is past perfect—the timeframe of the past is the "I met Raschel", but by that time, Raschel had already come, so you want to go into the past even further, which is the past perfect tense, also known as the pluperfect tense. As for held a meeting, paperrater.com marks it as a cliche.