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A shutdown that has been planned
its been shutdown! :/
You can't, as LimeWire have been shutdown.
Answer"Will have been" is the initial structure of the future perfect continuous tense. (See the second answer for its other usage)AnswerNo, it isn't; it's the Future Perfect of the verb TO BE. "Will have been GOING", for instance, is the Present Perfect Continuous of the verb TO GO. Answer"Will have been going" is the future perfect continuous tense. This tense follows this structure: Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Will" + Auxiliary Verb "Have" + Auxiliary Verb "Be" (Been) + Present ParticipleThe present perfect continuous tense follows this structure:Subject + Auxiliary Verb "Have" or "Has" + Auxiliary Verb "Be" (Been) + Present Participle.Thus: the present perfect continuous tense would be "have been going" without the auxiliary verb "will".See the related links for more information.
Just like you I was shocked to discover that the site had been shutdown. The site was being abused, hacked, and had many easily accessible cheats.
It could be:a be verb = am waiting, is kept.an auxiliary verb = have been waiting.a modal auxiliary verb = could have been waiting.
To open something that has been secured.
The network has been shutdown. The related question has more information
A variation of Aviation Turbine Fuel has always been used in turbine engines. Variations of gasoline have always been used in aircraft with piston engines.
Yes, "have" can function as a helping verb in verb phrases to show tense or aspect in English grammar. It is often used in present perfect and past perfect tenses.
No. Have is a verb, or an auxiliary verb used in the perfect tenses (have been, had been).
The water doesn't actually get used up, instead it passes through the turbine and continues on like normal. However, it will have been slowed down by the turbine.