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		Grammar and Linguistics > Past simple or present perfect? Or both?     
			
		 Past simple or present perfect? Or both? 
		
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 LenkaW
 
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							| Past simple or present perfect? Or both? 
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							| Dear colleagues,   which of these sentences is correct?   I see a friend with a leg in plaster and I ask:   What happened (to you)? or What has happened (to you)?   Or are both questions possible and gramatically correct? I can´t know what the answer will be:   The friend can answer: I broke my leg yesterday. / I´ve broken my leg.    Is it different in British and in American English?   Thank you for your help.   Lenka |  21 May 2017      
					
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 ninon100
 
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							| If you �re British, you �ll probably ask "What �s happened?" If you �re American, "What happened?" In the modern International English both are fine.  |  21 May 2017     
					
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 FrauSue
 
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							| I think that the nuance is slightly different in each. What happened to you? --> an event in the past. Answer: I fell off my motorbike. What �s happened to you? --> consequence in the present. Answer: I�ve shattered my tibia.  
 So I suppose it depends if you want to know how the injury occurred or what the injury is more precisely. |  21 May 2017     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| To add more to two good answers:   If there was obviously a single incident that caused the question, then "What happened to you?" is best, although I think the British might still say "What �s happened to you?"   If it has been a while since you saw the person, and he or she is visibly very changed, you would definitely say, "What has happened to you?", because it wasn �t a single event that caused the change.   Bruce  |  21 May 2017     
					
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 LenkaW
 
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							|  Thank you all very much for your help :)     Lenka |  23 May 2017     
					
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