You have been here for four months.
The correct grammar is "You have been here for four months."
No, the correct grammar would be: "July has just started."
Yes, the grammar in the sentence "The attached invoices have been confirmed" is correct.
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).
No. "Him and I have been together." is not correct. The word him is an object pronoun, not a subject pronoun. The proper form of the sentence is "He and I have been together."
"Since last two months", that one is correct. When you are talking about a period of time, you have to use since, because it's a grammatical word used to indicate that a situation has continued from a particular time or event in the past.In more simple words, both of them (for and since) are used to indicate the duration of an action. Sinceindicates the beginning of an action, for indicates the duration.• I have been living in London since last June. (and I'm still living there.)• I have been living in London for one year. (because I don't live there anymore.)
No, the correct grammar would be: "July has just started."
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).
I believe it is "have"
the grammar is correct. i think.
No. Not in any grammar I've herd.
The correct verb is had been.Examples:This workout studio had been a gas station at one time.Jerome had been waiting for an hour.
Yes but depending on the context you should have -- a/thedocument has been printed
"You have always been the best" would be more grammatically correct.
government controls HAVE been abolished
The correct sentence is: "Have you ever traveled before?"
Yes.
No. "Him and I have been together." is not correct. The word him is an object pronoun, not a subject pronoun. The proper form of the sentence is "He and I have been together."