Can I say these sentences(grammatical?):
"There has not been any problem happen to me." No. rather than these ("There has not been any problem that happens to me" No. and "There has not been any problem happening to me" No. and "There has not been any problem happened to me" No. )
The structure is not idiomatic at all. Let's change it a little and see if we can get to the point of what you're asking.
There's something strange happening to me. OK.
There's something strange happen to me. NO.
There's something strange happened to me. NO.
There's something strange that happens to me (when I watch TV for more than four hours). OK.
There's something strange that happened to me (yesterday). Borderline acceptable.
Something strange is happening to me. OK.
Something strange happened to me (yesterday). OK.
"There is a person
say bad things about her."
No. rather than these ("There is a person
saying bad things about her"
OK. and "There is a person
who says bad things about her
OK)
I know the ones in the brackets are correct but I am just curious about "happen and "say"
One Extra Question
What is the difference between "There has not been any problem happening to me" and "There has not been any problem happened to me" in meaning
I don't get enough meaning from these to make
any kind of judgment, so I don't think I can answer in a way that
addresses your question. Maybe my examples above have already
answered your question.
CJ