Comment by MarkusWandel
6 hours ago
"Ever after" with a time limit. If you actually google as someone suggested, the third hit is for the divorce proceedings.
6 hours ago
"Ever after" with a time limit. If you actually google as someone suggested, the third hit is for the divorce proceedings.
Wrong marriage. They are still married today and had four children.
"had" or "has"? Huge difference! I will assume "has".
Edit: oops, yeah, "have", not "has". My bad. :P
Arguably Melissa had four and thus they have four, eh?
“Have” is the word you are looking for, “has” isn’t grammatically correct. However, “had” in past tense is also correct, as it refers to the fact that they were born in the past, it does not imply (as you seem to be saying) that the children aren’t alive anymore.
sorry I changed to “have”.