That depends on the pronoun you are using at the time.
Example: "I have planned to be out."
"You have planned to be out."
"She has planned to be out."
"They have planned to be out."
"We have planned to be out."
"John has planned to be out."
"The whole family has planned to be out."
Yes, it is correct in the following type of construction: 'What do you have planned for this afternoon?' It means the same as 'What have you planned for this afternoon?' or 'What plans do you have for this afternoon?' or 'What have you got planned for this afternoon?' or 'What have you planned to do this afternoon?'
I would say" Pre-planned for a month".
If a friend or family is having a 30th birthday, a party should be planned. Their should be decorations and cake that say 'Happy 30th Birthday'.
Being exposed to music since birth, yes, one could say he planned to become a composer. or it was planned for him by his parents and family.
The word for planned is prévu.
Yesss
As much as you want.
It will say so in your tax records.
A centrally planned economy usually has one central body (government agency) that determines the products that should be produced and how they should be sold. In a centrally planned economy, the forces of demand and supply will play a very small role in pricing or export and imports.
The contraction should've is a verb, a shortened form for the verbs 'should' and 'have'.The contraction functions in a sentence as a verb or auxiliary verb.Example:We should have planned a little better.We should've planned a little better.
no were but if you know more then me say so ha
Yes, the contraction should've is a verb, a shortened form for the verbs 'should' and 'have'.The contraction functions in a sentence as a verb or auxiliary verb.Example:We should have planned a little better.We should've planned a little better.