Do you mean "had been," as in "She had been a taxi driver for years." If so, 'had being' isn't correct.
very far from being correct
Wikipedia has him joining the Army which is not a correct term for being drafted, although he may have been
That is hard to say in a few words. I suppose it is saying and doing the right things at the right time. Being polite, well mannered and classy.
The adjective 'correct' (as in a correct answer or the correct way to do something) is tadashii (ただしい). The verb 'to correct' is teisuru (ていする).
To get correct confirmation of Colonel James Powell being a Tuskegee Airmen please contact the Tuskegee Airmen Organization at the link below.
Neither "has being" nor "have being" is correct. The correct form is "being." For example, "He is being helpful" is the correct way to phrase it, indicating someone's current state of being or behavior.
Being is the correct spelling.
"Have been" is the correct phrase to use. "Have being" is not grammatically correct.
it is correct
"You are going there" is correct if the speaker is not at the location being referred to. "You are coming there" is correct if the speaker is already at the location being referred to.
The correct phrase to use depends on the context of the sentence. "To be" is used as an infinitive verb phrase, while "to being" is not grammatically correct in standard English. For example, "I like to be alone" is correct, while "I like to being alone" is not.
"Thank you for being so patient." That is correct.
"True" implies accuracy or genuineness, while "correct" generally refers to being free from error or conforming to a certain standard. Something can be true without necessarily being correct, and vice versa.
No, the correct way to say it is "be a human being."
Being able is the correct version of the sentence. You can use it as a fragment of any sentence.
Yes, I would say that sentence would be grammatically correct.
It depends how you use it. If you use it after something it can be correct. But being in a sentence by itself isn't correct.