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What is happened or What was happened. | WordReference Forums Neither is grammatically correct "What has happened?" is the proper way to say it, though I wouldn't expect that level of formality on the scene of a vehicle crash I'd expect to hear "What's happened?" or, more likely, "What happened?"
What happen or what happened - English Language Usage Stack Exchange 2 "What happened?" is correct here If your question refers to the whole sentence "Which is correct and preferred: what happen or what happened?" then I would rephrase it as Which is correct: "what happen" or "what happened"?
Is what happened is correct? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange "Essentially what happened is the state approved the same dollar amount it did last year for the supplemental general fund" My thinking is, the above, as well generally, is incorrect b c of the verb-agreement rules - and "what happened was " would be [more] correct, context depended obviously
happen to be and happen to have - expressions of probability? No, not at all In both cases, something "happened" It is a fact, not just a possibility To say "happened to be" or "happened to have" implies that it could have happened by chance (not likely for a degree in computer science—that would necessarily be intentional) It does not include an iota of chance that the thing might NOT have happened
What Has Happened to Respect? - JW. ORG Read articles about respect and what Jehovah’s Witnesses are doing to promote respect in communities around the world
What ever happened to versus Whatever happened to? What ever happened to (some noun from the past)? I came to English SE to resolve it I read the (related) questions: Whatever happened to "what ever" and whenever did it happen? Can "whatever" be split into two words? but was unable to glean which was preferred in my context Is there a preference, or are they equivalent? Is there a rule I can