Have Got

'Have got' is a common British way to talk about possession, relationships, and characteristics. It means the same as 'have' but forms questions and negatives without 'do'.

Post
Level A2 Verbs & Verb Patterns

Summary

  1. 'Have got' is a common British way to talk about possession, relationships, and characteristics. It means the same as 'have' but forms questions and negatives without 'do'.
Structure
subject + have/has got + object

Examples

  1. I've got two brothers.
  2. She's got brown eyes.
  3. Have you got a pen?
  4. They haven't got a car.

Common mistakes

  • Using 'do' with 'have got', e.g. 'Do you have got a car?' instead of 'Have you got a car?'.
  • Saying 'I have got go' — 'have got to' means must, but plain possession is 'have got' + noun.

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