This Is Not What You Had Planned was created on 2008-08-04.
A Carefully Planned Accident was created on 2006-06-21.
The Repercussions of a Badly Planned Suicide was created in 2002.
International Centre for the Study of Planned Events was created in 2008.
Ahsoka Tano was created when the new TV series "The Clone Wars" was being planned.
That depends on the pronoun you are using at the time. Example: "I have planned to be out." "You have planned to be out." "She has planned to be out." "They have planned to be out." "We have planned to be out." "John has planned to be out." "The whole family has planned to be out."
The architect created a three-dimensional model of the bank he planned to build.
The Nazis designed and planned the Dachau concentration camp but it was the prisoners who would of been in them, who actually built it.
Frankenstein was not the monster, Frankenstein was a Doctor who created the monster, btw and he created because he wanted to help everyone. He first planned that the monster actually should be an angel. :D
Yes, it is correct in the following type of construction: 'What do you have planned for this afternoon?' It means the same as 'What have you planned for this afternoon?' or 'What plans do you have for this afternoon?' or 'What have you got planned for this afternoon?' or 'What have you planned to do this afternoon?'
No one planned it.
No it has not been planned.
A shutdown that has been planned