You use "have" for present tense and "had" for past tense. Had is also the form used in contrary to fact conditions, for example If I had known you were coming I would have baked a cake.
'Have' is used as a present tense auxiliary verb (e.g., "I have a dog"). 'Had' is used as a past tense auxiliary verb (e.g., "I had a dog").
The word versus is a preposition; therefore, it doesn't have tense.
You use "their" when referring to a group of people or when the gender is unknown. You use "his" when referring to a singular male and "her" when referring to a singular female.
Versus has no past tense. "Do you remember last year? Well there was a battle match Wikianswers versus Wikipedia. Wikianswers totally won!"
The use of "has" versus "have" in a sentence depends on the subject. "Has" is used with the third-person singular (he, she, it), while "have" is used with first-person, second-person, and third-person plural (I, you, we, they). For example: She has a cat. We have two dogs.
The past tense of "versus" is still "versus" as it is not a verb. "Versus" is a preposition used to indicate opposition or contrast between two things.
When it comes to Democrats and Republicans, it's not Right versus left, it's Right versus wrong...
You use "their" when referring to a group of people or when the gender is unknown. You use "his" when referring to a singular male and "her" when referring to a singular female.
No, it is an abbreviation of the word, versus.
I would use Spearman and Kendall
Use "I" when referring to yourself. Example: "I am a woman." Use "my" when referring to something you possess. Example: "My hair is long."
You can only use him in Versus mode, but he is controlled by the same attack buttons.
no you can´t you only can use them in the versus mode and in training
One of the pros of concrete versus steel in a building framework would be that it is cheaper to use concrete. One of the cons would be that it is not as safe to use concrete.
you can only play as infected in versus or if you use cheats
Energy, versus passive in which energy is not used.
EITHER USAGE IS CORRECT. The choice is yours.
Energy, versus passive in which energy is not used.