Which is correct?
- Have you a car?
- Do you have a car?
- Have you got a car?
- All three are correct.
0 voters
Let’s see what you think…[YSaerTTEW443543]
TOEIC listening, photographs: A private airplane[YSaerTTEW443543]
Which is correct?
0 voters
Let’s see what you think…[YSaerTTEW443543]
TOEIC listening, photographs: A private airplane[YSaerTTEW443543]
Hey
What is the correct one. I’m confused, and don’t tell me all of them are correct… :lol:
Well, grammatically all three versions are correct, I guess. (Alan will confirm this). ‘Have you a car’? is very British and might be a bit old-fashioned now. ‘Have you got a car?’ is the typcial British question whereas ‘Do you have a car?’ is a bit more American. With English being an international language, these differences will diminish though…[YSaerTTEW443543]
TOEIC listening, photographs: A walk in the park[YSaerTTEW443543]
Thanks for clarification, and still waiting for Professor Alan to confirm it,
Many thanks for your remark…
I would like to make some comments about ‘have’. ‘Have you a car?’ I would not accept as an alternative to: ‘Do you own a car?’ in the sense of possession or ownership.
At the same time it is possible to say: ‘I have a car’ . Similarly it is not acceptable to say: ‘I haven’t a car.’ I am using the word ‘acceptable’ and not ‘correct’ because I am referring to how something is used in current English. If you are going to use ‘have’ with the meaning ‘possess’, it is preferable to use it as follows:
‘I don’t have a car?’
‘Do you have a car?’
‘I have a car.’
‘I haven’t got a car.’
‘Have you got a car?’
‘I have got a car’.
‘Have you?’ pops up in various expressions in an idiomatic form and at the moment I can honestly only think of one:
‘Have you a moment/second?’ in the sense of
‘Are you free to talk to me for a short time?’
But then in statements ‘have’ is used for all sorts of things idiomatically: have a bath, have a baby, have a headache - all of which are not related to ownership.
What I have said in this note is certainly not exhaustive. I feel that ‘have’ warrants a chapter to itself.
That is What I can Say atleast Perfect, Thank you for youe Detaild answer,
Regards
The second option is best:
Have you got a car?
– “Got” is redundant.
Have you a car?
– No offense to Alan and other Brits, but “Have you a car?” sounds like something Yoda might say… which is, while acceptable… well, weird.
Therefore, incontrovertibly the best means by which to state the question is this:
Do
you
have
a
car
?