Yes "She had a car" is correct in the sense that She used to have a car before but it is not there right now. It would be incorrect to the sense that She had a meal which means she ate the meal..
Yes!
The sentence "He gets farts in the car" should be written like this. "He gets in the car and farts" or "He farts in the car
The correct one would be HAS DAMAGED. It is because the speaker is saying after the car has been damaged.
no it is not a correct sentence.
The sentence, "They are going to the beach." is correct.
Yes, perfectly correct.
Remove 'it' word ... My car is beautiful
Yes!
To correct the unclear reference, you must reword the sentence. The sentence isn't clear that the pronoun 'it' refers to the suit or the car. Reworded: Take the suit to be cleaned when you take out the car. Put the suit in the car and take the car to be cleaned.
yes
customers are going to purchase a car
Past-tense. Solid wording.
Yes, very correct.
Yes, that wording is correct. An example of a sentence that uses this wording is "I am not looking forward to washing the car."
they're both correct depending on if your talking in past tense or present
That will be correct so long as you finish the sentence and say when or where it was built. Otherwise, it is just part of a sentence.
The sentence "He gets farts in the car" should be written like this. "He gets in the car and farts" or "He farts in the car