he had the intend to finish
or
he had the intent to finish
..thanks..

He had the intent to finish. Or...He intended to finish.
I agree, and i think the differnce in these two is the stregnth of the resolve. Intended isn't as strong, it sounds like he just decided to finish. The "intent" sentence implies that he had a very strong resolve to finish.
he had the intend to finish
or
he had the intent to finish
..thanks..
I agree, and i think the difference in these two is the strength of the resolve. Intended isn't as strong, it sounds like he just decided to finish. The "intent" sentence implies that he had a very strong resolve to finish.
I agree, and i think the difference in these two is the strength of the resolve. Intended isn't as strong, it sounds like he just decided to finish. The "intent" sentence implies that he had a very strong resolve to finish.
No, both are not correct.I think they are both incorrect.
he had the intend to finish
No, both are not correct.
He had the intent to finish. (kind of clumsy, but could work)
His intention is to finish. (better and grammatically correct)
His intention was to finish. (this works, too)
He intended to finish. (again, grammatically correct)
The difference is in the tense.
I intend (future) to go Christmas shopping. It was my intent (past) to get it done this weekend. If I don't get it all done this weekend, then I intend (future) to finish up next weekend. This is my intention (present).
No, both are not correct.
That's what I said. The poster was saying that both sentences are correct and I disagreed with her.No, you can't have an "intend." Intend isn't a noun; it is a verb.
"He had the intend to finish," is incorrect.
LOL!! I adore the English language and it's building blocks, although American English does present some challenges to those trying to learn it. 
That's what I said. The poster was saying that both sentences are correct and I disagreed with her.

That's what I said. The poster was saying that both sentences are correct and I disagreed with her.
Unless of course (and I just noticed this) you are speaking of my double-negative where I said, "No, both are not correct" turning that sentence into a positive meaning I think both are correct and cancelling out the negatives in the sentence.
However, reading the context should have demonstrated that I was saying that both sentences are not correct.LOL!!

I re-read her post and I think you are right; she was saying that both are incorrect:I think the poster was saying they were both incorrect.
he had the intend to finish
or
he had the intent to finish
