It has been agreed that no one will violate the contract.
The union and management have been agreed for weeks.
BOTH are correct. The key factor determining correctness is the subject, which you have omitted from your query.
As per our discussion, Mr. ETCO has been agreed to submit the single VAT invoice from IPA 02 to IPA 12 as a Consolidated.
No, it's were in agreement.
Agreed with each other.
You agreed on something.
The two of you agreed.
You reached an agrement.
Um, no...Say "I agree with you" or "I am agreeing with you."
You say yes when you agree.
That is the correct spelling of "approved" (agreed, endorsed).
Being able is the correct version of the sentence. You can use it as a fragment of any sentence.
accepted, permitted, official, agreed, appropriate, correct, sanctioned, ratified
was,were,were been aith second and third form of verb.
The use of the word in the sentence you quote is in the sense of having been perceived as being rude to an elder. So yes, the sentence is correct.
Both "agreed on" and "agreed to" are correct, but they are used in slightly different contexts. "Agreed on" is used to refer to reaching a mutual understanding or consensus about a specific topic or idea. "Agreed to" is used when referring to accepting or giving consent to a proposal, plan, or course of action.
He agreed with You
Agreed is the past tense of agree.
Yes.
No, "should had been" is not the correct tense. It's tricky, I know, but you have to use"sould have been".
The correct grammar is "you have just been." This structure follows the typical order of subject (you) + auxiliary verb (have) + adverb (just) + main verb (been).
That is the correct spelling of "approved" (agreed, endorsed).
Been is the past tense of the verb to be: I have been to the library. The term "of been" is not a correct phrase in English. Unfortunately, many people use it instead of "have been". For example, "I could of been an athlete." is incorrect; "I could have been an athlete." is the correct term.
The word "busted" is commonly used in informal contexts to mean caught or discovered doing something wrong or illegal, for example, "I got busted for speeding." It can also refer to something breaking or not functioning properly, like "my phone screen is busted."
No. We would say Have you been in love with a monkey.
Being able is the correct version of the sentence. You can use it as a fragment of any sentence.
I agreed to drive the kids to band practice. The neighbor agreed to watch my dog while I was away.