No. You can say "I regret not having checked that," or "You regret not having checked that." The word "for" is unnecessary.
we will be having an event
That is the correct spelling of "religious" (having a religion or faith).
The correct spelling of the word is beautiful (having beauty).
The correct spelling is "valuable" (having worth).
That is the correct spelling of "pointed" (having a point).
No not at all
Yes. Fun is a noun. well,having word is used in four different situations. a. having food b. having sex c. pragnant women can say i am having a baby. d. having fun has newly introduced. so that is grammatically correct. regards Emma watson
She has money to pay rent" is correct. "She is having money to pay rent" is not grammatically correct, although it might be understood to convey the same meaning.link here >πππππ://πππ.πππππππππ24.πππ/πππππ/372576/πΈπππππππππππππππ/
Grammatically yes. Literally, it's almost certainly NOT correct. 'You cut me like a knife' is a simile that compares the emotional pain of what you did to the pain of having been cut with a knife.
No, it's having a meeting or attending a meeting (or you might be holding a meeting if you're the boss).
"have well and" can be a grammatically correct phrase only if the word "and" is followed by another adverb, with "well and truly" probably being the most common. In fact this phrase is so common that it is best avoided as a cliche.
I got some trouble with my IG is not a correct statement. I am having some trouble with my IG.
negative
Grammatically correct but idiomatically awkward and unclear. Do you mean something like Having a place to call home can mean different things to different people? Or is it really, as stated, that a place called home can have purposes of its own?
If you are not having any problems or symptoms, there is no need to get your Mirena checked.
You would have to add a little more: I'm having fun at my job. or I'm having fun at this job. No one would use "I'm having fun at job." Also, some alternate ways to say approximately the same thing are "I like my job," or "I enjoy my work."
Perhaps yes, in the technical sense of having many different kinds of fish. However, it will be almost universally taken by native speakers as wrong. Better to say "I have many kinds of fish."