"I'll get around to it eventually. For the time being, you can do this."
It's a sort of 'while you wait' kind of thing.
He thought being on time was a triviality. Don't waste time on trivialities.
I'm sorry for being late is and example of how to use the word being in a sentence.
You are not being realistic if you expect people to work on a holiday without time and a half.
"I was being neglectful by not feeding my cat on time"
no
Two possibility : 1. When a state of being is the subject of the sentence. like : Being completely in shock, I freeze. 2. When a passive verb is the subject of the sentence Like : Being chased by a pitbull, I jumped over a two meters high concrete wall !
I cared for her well-being.
Chairman asked whether this matter could be held in abeyance for the time being, Council agreed.
you use the word demote in a sentence like this: I will demote you from being the teacher.
This sentence is a declarative sentence, as it is making a statement about something that happened - in this case, it being time for lunch.
It depends how you use it. If you use it after something it can be correct. But being in a sentence by itself isn't correct.
From time to time I will eat an orange.