have a Ph.D

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Silverobama

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Aug 8, 2010
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Chinese
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China
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China
I wrote the following sentences.

a) When he claimed to have a Ph.D., he was lying.
b) When he claimed that he has a Ph.D., he was lying.


Are these sentences both natural and do they mean the same?
 
While Ph.D is not incorrect the modern standard is to write it as PhD without the full stop.
 
While Ph.D is not incorrect the modern standard is to write it as PhD without the full stop.
a) When he claimed to have a PhD., he was lying.
b) When he claimed that he has a PhD., he was lying.


Are these sentences both natural and do they mean the same?
 
I wrote the following sentences.

a) When he claimed to have a Ph.D., he was lying.
b) When he claimed that he has a Ph.D., he was lying.


Are these sentences both natural and do they mean the same?
They mean the same thing, but I'd use "backshift" in (b) -- had not has -- and would spell Ph.D. with two periods:

b') When he claimed that he had a Ph.D., he was lying.
 
a) When he claimed to have a PhD, he was lying.
b) When he claimed that he had a PhD, he was lying.


Those are the versions most BrE speakers would write these days. We don't go in for stops in abbreviations.
 
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