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  1. 4. Has been broken implies someone broke it, while has broken states that it has passed into a non-working condition, keeping open the possibility of this happening spontaneously. An important distinction in some cases. – Chris H. Sep 6, 2013 at 13:15.

  2. 2012年7月1日 · The message has been sent. vs. The message was sent. She has gone out. vs. She went out. It has been towed. vs. It was towed. A: Please remind Mrs. Jones of our appointment this afternoon. B: I've sent the message. (The message has been sent.) A

  3. 2017年5月15日 · 1. "is now" describes the current state of the visible sky but says nothing of the past or when a change in state took place. Whereas "has now been" is more nuanced, implying that a recent change has taken place. Perhaps such that the 'viewer' of this sky witnessed the change (s) in the state of the sky. Perhaps not.

  4. 2012年8月9日 · To is a preposition of motion and you are talking about movement towards, and arrival in, Florida. Been in connotes a stay in Florida (which may be short, or very long, or simply passing through). In denotes position, and you are talking about the state or condition of being located in Florida. It doesn't matter whether you took a trip there or ...

  5. 2014年7月21日 · If placed between 1. and 2., it modifies the perfective, temporal aspect of the verb (basically, it modifies 1. and 2. taken together); if placed between 2. and 3., it modifies 3. only. In plainer terms: Mobile technology progress has largely been consumer-driven rather than enterprise-driven. Mobile technology progress has largely been shaped ...

  6. 2013年7月31日 · 10. Yes, “has been having” is perfectly fine in English. In your example sentence, “has been having” does not work. “Has been having” is the continuous aspect of the present perfect tense “has had”. The continuous aspect requires either an action that has been ongoing or an action or state that has repeatedly occurred in the ...

  7. 2016年1月13日 · The package has already been received. The above uses the present perfect tense: has been . The present perfect tense is formed with a present tense form of "to have" plus the past participle of a verb, in this case "been," which is then followed by another past participle, "received," as part of then forming the sentence's passive voice, the passive voice being formed by the verb "to be" plus ...

  8. 2016年5月1日 · 27. "Has been" and "have been" are both in the present perfect tense. "Has been" is used in the third-person singular and "have been" is used for first- and second-person singular and all plural uses. The present perfect tense refers to an action that began at some time in the past and is still in progress. For example, if I started studying ...

  9. 2018年4月6日 · 1 Answer. A passive verb needs to have [to be] before the main verb (which should be in past participle form). 'has been' and 'was' are both forms of [to be], thus both sentences are grammatically correct. The difference is the tense: 'has been named' is present perfect. It implies that it was named the Indian Wars in the past and that the name ...

  10. 2018年5月31日 · If you want them to finish in the past (but still last for a presumably long time) instead of continuing into the present, use the Past Perfect tense instead. All you have to do is change 'have'/'has' into 'had' for each. For example: "He had been a boxer." Share. Improve this answer.

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