The sentence "It will being waited" is a mixture of tense forms and is therefore not correct.
'waited' is the past participle of wait. The past participle is used for past tense, the passive tense, the perfect tenses or as an adjective.
'It will' is future.
'being' is the present participle of 'be'
Depending on what the sentence is intended to mean, some alternatives might be:
In general situations:-
In a restaurant:-
he was being waited by him
Yes, but a better sentence is "She dislikes BEING lied to."
Simple Subject= You Simple predicate= waited
No, the correct way to say it is "be a human being."
Luke waited patiently for David to arrive.
he was being waited by him
There is no preposition in that sentence. I is a pronoun, waited is a verb, and outside is an adverb.
Waited
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.
My is a possessive adjective. Anxiously is an adverb modifying the verb waited. The is an article. (By the oven is an adverb prepositional phrase.)
Being able is the correct version of the sentence. You can use it as a fragment of any sentence.
a correct sentence
It is an adverb qualifying the verb waited.
Yes, but a better sentence is "She dislikes BEING lied to."
"Thank you for being so patient." That is correct.
I found I had waited to no avail. As the patient feral cat waited for a passing mouse, he seemed frozen in place prior to his pounce. I waited and waited for for my waiter, but I just had to get out of my waders.
i waited in an anteroom