Yes, "have been" is the past perfect form of the verb "to be." It is used to indicate an action that began in the past and continued up to a specific point in the past.
The present perfect form of the verb "to be" is "have been" or "has been", depending on the subject. For example: "I have been," "You have been," "He/She/It has been," "We have been," "You have been," "They have been."
The present perfect form of "to be" is "have been" for plural subjects (I, you, we, they) and "has been" for singular subjects (he, she, it).
The past form of "am" is "was" and the past participle is "been."
The present perfect continuous tense uses a form of "have" followed by "been" and the present participle form of the main verb (ending in -ing). For example, "She has been working on her project all day."
The correct phrase is "have been." "Have been" is used to indicate a completed action or state that started in the past and has continued up until the present moment. "Have being" is not grammatically correct in this context.
The correct phrase is "have been." "Have been" is used to indicate a completed action or state that started in the past and has continued up until the present moment. "Have being" is not grammatically correct in this context.
Has been grooming(Singular form) Have been grooming(Plural Form)
The present perfect form of "to be" is "have been" for plural subjects (I, you, we, they) and "has been" for singular subjects (he, she, it).
I/you/we/they have been. He/she/it has been.
I/you/we/they have been. He/she/it has been.
No. The form closest to that would be has been.
declarative form
The present perfect continuous tense uses a form of "have" followed by "been" and the present participle form of the main verb (ending in -ing). For example, "She has been working on her project all day."
No, the term 'have been' is a verb, the present perfect form of the verb 'to be'.Example: I have been here the whole time.The verb form 'have been' also functions as an auxiliary verb.Example: I have been wondering where you were.
I don't know what you mean by the first form of the verb.But with have been you use the '-ing' form of the verb. This tense is called present perfect continuous.I have been waiting here for hours.
The word been is usually used after the word have or a form of the word, including has, will have, and had. You use has been as a present perfect continuous form. She has been working for three hours is an example of how to use has been.
The present perfect form of the verb "to be" is "have been" or "has been", depending on the subject. For example: "I have been," "You have been," "He/She/It has been," "We have been," "You have been," "They have been."