Yes, "have been" is the past perfect form of the verb "to be." It is used to indicate an action that began in the past and continued up to a specific point in the past.
The present perfect form of the verb "to be" is "have been" or "has been", depending on the subject. For example: "I have been," "You have been," "He/She/It has been," "We have been," "You have been," "They have been."
The present perfect form of to be is have been or has been.I have been in this town for two years.
The past form of "am" is "was" and the past participle is "been."
The form of present perfect continuous is- have/has + been + present participleFor example have been waiting, has been waiting.I have been waitingfor two hours! Where have you been?
The verb "have been" is the correct form for the first person, second person, a the third person singular.Examples:I have been...You have been...He (she/it) has been...We have been...They have been...The form "have being" is not a correct verb form.
The present perfect form of the verb "to be" is "have been" or "has been", depending on the subject. For example: "I have been," "You have been," "He/She/It has been," "We have been," "You have been," "They have been."
The present perfect form of to be is have been or has been.I have been in this town for two years.
The past form of "am" is "was" and the past participle is "been."
Has been grooming(Singular form) Have been grooming(Plural Form)
I/you/we/they have been. He/she/it has been.
I/you/we/they have been. He/she/it has been.
No. The form closest to that would be has been.
declarative form
The form of present perfect continuous is- have/has + been + present participleFor example have been waiting, has been waiting.I have been waitingfor two hours! Where have you been?
The verb "have been" is the correct form for the first person, second person, a the third person singular.Examples:I have been...You have been...He (she/it) has been...We have been...They have been...The form "have being" is not a correct verb form.
The third form of the verb "be" is "been." It is used in perfect tenses, such as "has been" or "have been," to indicate a state or condition that started in the past and continues to the present.
The present perfect progressive form of "discuss" is "have been discussing."