Which form of verb is used with have been?
“Have been” has 3 meanings: It’s only “have been” -> ”I have been to New York twice.” It’s present perfect simple with past participle of verb “be”. Or it’s used as present perfect continuous -> “I have been waiting here for 1 hour.” There is a gerund for of verb “wait”
What verb tense is have?
The base form of the verb is have. The present participle is having. The past tense and past participle form is had. The present and past forms are often contracted in everyday speech, especially when have is being used as an auxiliary verb.
Will have or will have been?
For your example you probably want to use will be. This refers to to a point in time which is in the future relative to now – in this case the year 2030. Will have been refers to a time, which is in the past relative to a time in the future. By 2030, new well-paid jobs will have been created in many sectors.
Would and would have been?
What is the difference between “would have” and “would have been”? Answer: “Would have” is used together with a main verb. When you see “would have” in a sentence it means that the action didn’t actually happen, because something else didn’t happen first.
Is would have correct grammar?
Could have, would have, and should have are sometimes called “modals of lost opportunities.” They work like a grammatical time machine. To form these past modals, use could, would, or should followed by have, followed by a past participle verb. Use have for all pronouns; never use has or had to form a past modal.
What are present tense words?
| Tense | Time words |
|---|---|
| Simple present | Every day, month, week, year; always; sometimes; never; frequently |
| Simple past | Yesterday; # years, weeks, months, days, hours ago; in (past year); last (month, week, year) |
Would you have pp grammar?
2: Because ‘would’ (and will) can also be used to show if you want to do something or not (volition), we can also use would have + past participle to talk about something you wanted to do but didn’t. This is very similar to the third conditional, but we don’t need an ‘if clause’.
Could you please vs Would you please?
But I would suppose that “would” is more polite, because it expresses the idea of probability, and of willingness, and of the desire that something be done, whereas “could” is more in the realm of ability (yes I can). And according to the American Heritage Dictionary, “would” is used to make a polite request.
Can you please is correct?
Both are correct. The first is more direct, and the second is more polite. Could you please . . . gives slightly more room for refusal than Can you please . . .
Is could you please a question?
A polite request can be made with an interrogative clause (‘Could you please pay us’), an imperative clause (‘Please pay us’), a declarative clause (‘We would appreciate it if you could pay us’), and so on. I use the words ‘question’ and ‘request’ and ‘statement’ as kinds of meaning, not terms of grammar.