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  1. A: Are you going anywhere today? B: I had planned to go to the beach but look at the rain! ( had is stressed; the meaning is ‘I have now changed my mind’) I’m very happy working as an engineer but I had wanted to be an actor when I was younger. The past perfect in conditional clauses.

    • Italiano

      Past perfect simple ( I had worked ) - English Grammar Today...

    • Deutsch

      Past perfect simple ( I had worked ) — English Grammar Today...

    • Had

      have had itinformal. (of a machine, etc.) to be in such a...

  2. 18 de mar. de 2013 · The contraction I’d can mean either ‘I would’ or ‘I had’. If you’re unable to understand the meaning of I’d (or he’d , she’d , we’d , etc.) from the context of a sentence, try looking at the verb form that follows it:

  3. The past perfect is made from the verb had and the past participle of a verb: I had finished the work. She had gone. The past perfect continuous is made from had been and the -ing form of a verb: I had been working there for a year. They had been painting the bedroom.

  4. I would must be followed by an infinitive without to ( or perfect infinitive as in I would have gone ). I had must be followed either by an object (a noun phrase, e.g. I had a little lamb, in which meaning it is rarely contracted) or by a verb's past participle.

  5. Translate I had. See 16 authoritative translations of I had in Spanish with example sentences, conjugations and audio pronunciations.

  6. have had itinformal. (of a machine, etc.) to be in such a bad condition that it is not useful or (of a person, team, etc.) to be doing so badly that they are certain to fail: I think this computer's had it. See more.

  7. When to use HAVE HAD & HAD HAD. In the present perfect, the auxiliary verb is always have (for I, you, we, they) or has (for he, she, it). In the past perfect, the auxiliary verb is always had. We use have had in the present perfect when the main verb is also “have”: I’m not feeling well.