The phrase "How has been the day to you?" is not correct in standard English. A more appropriate way to ask this would be, "How has your day been?" or "How was your day?" These alternatives clearly convey the intention of inquiring about someone's day.
by the day*
No, the correct saying is "How has your day been?"
No, in English, the term is "taken sick."Used in a sentence: "Poor Jonny's taken sick. He's been in bed all day."
i already have been appllied for my leave.
Clearly you aren't writing in English to correct you, so I don't see why I should wright in English to correct me.
hasNeither, really. But, has is the correct context.
by the day*
No, the correct saying is "How has your day been?"
yes it's absolutely correct
Yes. The correct phrase is "has been".
correct your english...
No, in English, the term is "taken sick."Used in a sentence: "Poor Jonny's taken sick. He's been in bed all day."
all are correct
"Has been" is present perfect tense, indicating an action that started in the past and continues into the present. "Was been" is not a correct verb phrase in English.
"Your day has been good!" in English is Il tuo giorno è stato buono! in Italian.
Both are correct. There is a subtle difference in meaning. The first implies that the speaker knows very little English; the second carries no such connotation.
Your phrase is not good English - 'I went to school or I was at school or I have been to school' would be better