He doesn't have a job is correct.
No. It should be: They let him go from his job.
Good job ...or you can say job well done...
The correct sentence is "He never has a job" because "has" is the correct singular verb form to match the singular subject "he." "Have" is the plural form of the verb and would not be correct in this context.
No, that sentence is not grammatically correct. Availability is a noun meaning how much of something is there to be used. You could say "What is the availability of this job?" or "Is this job available?" or "Is this job still open?"
Yes "awesome job on getting them to pay up" is acceptable grammar.
Yes, grammatically correct but unclear in meaning; for example:a very good work (of art)a very good work (of charity)a very good job (of work)a very good job (to work)There is insufficient information in your question to know its meaning.
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."
no she doesnt becasue her boss is a rude person and she is looking for a btter job
Better off financially
it doesnt
no she doesnt and shes to young for that stuff
Oh, dude, technically both are grammatically correct, but it just depends on when you're talking about uploading those files. "I have uploaded the files" implies you did it recently and it's still relevant, while "I had uploaded the files" suggests it happened in the past and might not be as important now. So, like, pick your tense wisely, man.