Had

John, where James had had 'had', had had 'had had'. 'Had had' had had the teachers approval.

This sentence describes two boys, John and James who have both written essays. John had used the words 'had had' instead of 'had' as James had used. The words 'had had' were approved by the teacher.

The eleven 'hads' in a row turn the sentence into practical jibberish although it is gramatically correct.

The interesting thing about this sentence is that it is almost impossible to aurally repeat unless the meaning is understood. It also makes much more sense in the written form since punctuation is included.

Stolen from Ben Piper benpiper73@hotmail.com.