Have been and has been are both forms of present perfect.
Use have been for I and plural subjects eg
I have been to China. They have been to China. The doctors have been to China.
Use has been for he/she/it and singular subjects eg
he has been to China. The boy has been to China.
Present perfect is used to talk about something that happened in the past but has result now or is important now
Had been is past perfect the same form is used for all subjects eg
He has been to China. We had been to China The doctor had been to China.
Past perfect is usually used to talk about something that happened in the past before another thing that happened in the past (past simple).
eg He had been to China when I last saw him. - saw = past simple
The proper use of the verb forms 'has been' and 'have been' is:for singular nouns (common or proper), use 'has been'for plural nouns (common or proper), use 'have been'Examples:John has been at work. Mary has beenshopping.The book has been in my locker the whole time.John and Mary have been out all morning. The Millers have been out all morning.The books have been in my locker the whole time.
as per my knowledge of English would have should use with active voice and would have been use with passive voice sentences for ex - 1. had i been there i would have done this . 2.It would have been very nice if had been there.
"Been" is the past participle of "be" and is used in perfect tenses (e.g., has been, had been). "Will be" is used to indicate a future state or action. So, you would use "been" for past actions or states, and "will be" for future actions or states.
"Have been" is the correct phrase to use. "Have being" is not grammatically correct.
It has been is correct.For he /she/ it or a singular noun subject use has egHe has been to Scotland. The teacher has been to Scotland.For all other subject use have egI have been to Scotland. We have been to Scotland. They have been to Scotland. The teachers have been to Scotland. ( the teachers = a plural subject)
When do we use has been and have been?
we can use have been in the first and second person, it is a present perfect
The word been is usually used after the word have or a form of the word, including has, will have, and had. You use has been as a present perfect continuous form. She has been working for three hours is an example of how to use has been.
You can use "had been" when talking about a state someone or something was in the past. He had been happy about the news at the time. The door had been closed the entire day.
How have you been doing. This have been a beautiful day.
My prayer has been answered!
It had been an amazing evening.
An answer to those questions has been found.
The proper use of the verb forms 'has been' and 'have been' is:for singular nouns (common or proper), use 'has been'for plural nouns (common or proper), use 'have been'Examples:John has been at work. Mary has beenshopping.The book has been in my locker the whole time.John and Mary have been out all morning. The Millers have been out all morning.The books have been in my locker the whole time.
as per my knowledge of English would have should use with active voice and would have been use with passive voice sentences for ex - 1. had i been there i would have done this . 2.It would have been very nice if had been there.
I have been to Disney Land before.
Has been is correct, since we are talking about the present. We wouldn't use have been since that would go with referees, plural, not referee singular. To use had been, we would be talking about something that happened in the past. For example, last year no referee had been sent a request.