No, the correct usage would be "sparked by" something, indicating the cause or source of the spark. For example, "The argument was sparked by a misunderstanding."
"Have been" is the correct phrase to use. "Have being" is not grammatically correct.
The correct phrase is "you had to leave." "Leave" is the correct verb form to use after "had to."
use "she didn't have to". "she didn't has to" is ungrammatical
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.
"He and I met yesterday" is correct. Subjects use the nominative case (I, we, he, she) while objects use the objective case (me, us, him, her).
The boer war was sparked by
Sparked a War was created on 2010-07-18.
The gleam in your eye can be sparked by something that excites or inspires you.
which event sparked world war 1?
Seeing an airplane at the Canadian exposition sparked her to fly.
has, sparked and dancing
Yes. It cleverly suggests correct use and wrongful use.
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.
"Tomorrow's weather is meant to be fine" is a correct way to use it.
The Correct Use of Soap was created in 1980-05.
The outlet sparked and popped, creating a safety risk.
It can be, and it can be a verb form (to spark) or noun. It would mean giving off sparks.