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Daniel
In spite of having taken or in spite of have taken Hello! I was wondering if the above structures could be right according to the sentence I pretend to make. For example: The original sentence is: Even though Luca took the early bus, he was still late for school! Now, I have to change the sentence using the word "spite". Luca was late for school in spite of having taken the early bus! or Luca was late for school in spite of have taken the early bus! I know the first one is the right, but, could it be right the second one as well? Thanks!
Mar 15, 2015 6:54 PM
Answers · 3
3
No. Definitely not. You can never follow 'of' with a base form of the verb. The rule is very easy. With the exception of some cases with 'to', all other prepositions - of, from, with, by, on, at and so on - MUST be followed by the gerund form...of having ... with having.. on having ... for having... . Remember this rule - it's a simple but very important one.
March 15, 2015
The correct version is: "...in spite of having taken..."
March 15, 2015
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